A gold tiara, wavy black hair, and that signature red-and-gold bodice make the Wonder Woman LEGO minifigure one of the more visually layered figures in the Lego DC lineup, and this step-by-step tutorial on how to draw the Wonder Woman LEGO minifigure walks through all of it with a clean, manageable process. The face gets a semi-realistic treatment here, with expressive eyes and red lips instead of the flat printed face you get on the actual brick figure.
What Makes This Figure Tricky to Sketch
The guide runs 12 steps and ends on a fully colored result, so both the line work and the color choices are covered. Most of the complexity sits in the face, since the semi-realistic styling means the features need more care than a standard LEGO face would. The body proportions follow the classic minifigure silhouette, which actually helps anchor the composition once the head is settled.
Wonder Woman Minifigure: Key Visual Features
- Long wavy black hair, gold tiara with red star
- Smiling face with expressive eyes and red lips
- Red and gold bodice with W emblem
- Blue shorts and peach LEGO minifigure arms
- Classic LEGO claw hands and block body shape
If you enjoy drawing DC heroes in minifigure form, the guides for Lex Luthor and Superman follow a similar structure and are worth working through back to back. Aquaman is another good one for practicing the minifigure body with more costume detail.
Reading the Step Colors in This Tutorial
Each step image uses a three-color system to show exactly what is new and what came before:
- Red Color: lines added in the current step.
- Black Color: lines completed earlier.
- Gray Color: base sketch for structure.
How to Draw Wonder Woman LEGO Minifigure: Step-by-Step Tutorial
Share Your Finished Wonder Woman Drawing
Once the coloring is done, drop your finished piece in the comments. It is always good to see how different people handle the face details and the costume colors. New tutorials go up on Facebook and Telegram as soon as they are published, a new YouTube video based on existing guides goes live every day, and Pinterest gets updated regularly if that is where you save your references. For more minifigure practice, the Batman minifigure guide is a solid next step, and Sensei Wu from Ninjago is worth a look if you want to stretch into a different LEGO universe. If you want to support the site, Patreon is where you can find unique hand-drawn coloring pages not available anywhere else.
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