Wild hair that flows in every direction, asymmetric hands, and a smug angular face add up to a drawing challenge worth taking seriously, and this guide walks through how to draw Lylace step by step as part of the broader Friday Night Funkin’ character lineup on the site. The asymmetry between the orb-holding hand and the clawed hand is where most people slow down.
Building Lylace Across 35 Steps
This tutorial runs through 35 steps and delivers a clean line art result with no color fill, so every step is focused on shape accuracy and confident linework. Lylace is drawn full body with a slightly casual stance that still reads as confident, and the loose baggy pants combined with the chunky shoes at the bottom give the lower half quite a bit of visual weight to balance against the dramatic hair at the top. The hair is the most time-consuming section of the sketch, so expect to slow down there.
Lylace’s Key Visual Features
- Long wild flowing hair with skull above
- Sharp angular eyes, smug expression
- Crop top with heart emblem on chest
- Baggy pants with large chunky shoes
- Orb in one hand, clawed other hand
If you are working through FNF characters, Static Memories Boyfriend and the Red Impostor are worth checking out next. For something with a looser casual design, Edd from Online Vs is a solid follow-up.
How the Step Colors Work in This Guide
Each step image uses a three-color system to show exactly what is happening at that stage:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Lylace: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Finished Your Lylace Sketch? Share It
Once the linework is done, drop your finished drawing in the comments below so others can see how it turned out. New tutorials get posted to Facebook and Telegram as soon as they go live, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes up every day, and Pinterest stays regularly updated if that is where you browse for drawing references. While you are here, battered Mickey taunting and Playable GF are two more FNF sketches worth adding to your practice list. If you want to support the project, the Patreon page is where unique hand-drawn coloring pages are available, and every bit of support helps keep new tutorials coming.