How to Draw a Bunny

In this detailed tutorial, we will show you how to draw a bunny, capturing its characteristic features, depicting the texture of the fur, and adding volume.
A bunny has a characteristically rounded body with large ears and soft fur. Your task is to convey these features on paper, aiming to make the animal look three-dimensional and as realistic as possible.
To do this, we will show you how to think in terms of volume – starting with basic geometric shapes, gradually adding mass and form, giving the bunny a finished, detailed appearance, and creating depth with the help of shading.
How to draw a bunny step by step
Step 1: Block in the head of the bunny
Start by sketching the bunny’s head as an oval, sphere-like form, keeping in mind that this is a three-dimensional shape rather than a flat circle. Place the head compositionally closer to the upper part of the page, but remember that the ears will be above it and the body below.

Step 2: Block in the body of the bunny
Slightly lower, indicate the bunny’s torso as another sphere of about the same size, and the lower part of the body as an even larger sphere. Arrange these forms with a slight forward tilt to suggest the bunny’s characteristic sitting pose.

Step 3: Sketch the animal’s facial axis
Draw a smooth vertical line through the central part of the bunny head, following the form and emphasizing its spherical volume. Then add two horizontal lines crossing the vertical one roughly in the middle. The central intersection of these lines marks the bridge of the animal’s nose.

Step 4: Draw the muzzle of the bunny
Depict the bunny’s muzzle in the space between the lower horizontal eye line and the bottom part of the sphere. On the muzzle, also draw a vertical line running exactly through the center and dividing it into two parts.

Step 5: Sketch the mouth and cheeks
Using the central vertical line on the muzzle, draw the bunny nose extending outward from it to the sides. Beneath it, indicate the chin with another curved line. On both sides of the head, draw the outlines of the bunny’s cheeks, trying to keep them symmetrical.

Step 6: Draw the ears of the bunny
In the upper part of the head, draw the ears as two elongated shapes. Check their symmetry and evenness, and sketch light symmetry lines between them. Indicate the inner contours of the ears.

Step 7: Sketch the front limbs
In the lower part of the torso oval, draw the front limbs of the bunny, with the paws placed evenly next to each other. Keep the volume of the forms in mind: the limbs themselves are cylinders, and the paws are flattened cubes.

Step 8: Add the animal’s hind limbs
Indicate the hind limbs in the same way, drawing the legs and paws placed on both sides of the body. When drawing all paired objects, try to sketch the left and right sides alternately and regularly check their symmetry.

Step 9: Draw the eyes of the bunny
Now, using clearer and cleaner lines, draw the eyes using the guide marks you placed earlier. Position the eyes evenly on both sides of the central line of the head. Remember that the eyes are also three-dimensional and are essentially two small spheres.

Step 10: Draw the nose of the bunny
In the central part of the muzzle, draw a triangular nose. Then give the bunny’s mouth a more authentic look by using short strokes to convey the texture of the fur. The bunny’s upper lip should look like two fluffy forms with the nose in the middle.

Step 11: Detail and refine the cheeks
Now, in the same way, draw the fur texture on the bunny’s cheeks. To depict the fur texture as accurately as possible, draw the lines from root to tip in roughly the same direction, depending on how the fur naturally grows on the animal.

Step 12: Add fur texture to the ears
As you trace the bunny’s ears, also give them a softer, furrier shape with short strokes that suggest the fur. Do not try to make the ears completely fluffy – alternate longer smooth lines with shorter fur-like ones.

Step 13: Add fur texture to the bunny’s body
Around the framework of the bunny’s chest and back, begin creating the fur texture using slightly larger tufts. There is no need to draw every single hair separately; draw as if in small clusters of hair moving rhythmically in roughly the same direction.

Step 14: Detail the front legs and paws
The bunny’s front legs are not as fluffy as its chest and cheeks, so trace them with smoother lines, adding fur only in certain places. Divide the paws into rounded toes, also trying to keep them generally facing the same direction and lying on the same plane.

Step 15: Refine the hind legs and paws
The upper part of the bunny’s hind legs is slightly fluffier than the front limbs, so use a few more textural lines there. Also divide the paws into separate toes, placing them visually on the same plane as the front paws so the drawing does not appear uneven.

Step 16: Sketch the fluffy tail and whiskers
Behind the body, in the lower part, draw a small tail using very fluffy short lines. On the head, draw the whiskers, placing them symmetrically on both sides of the bunny’s muzzle and drawing them from root to tip as well. Above the eyes, also draw the eyebrows with short, light lines.

Step 17: Refine the outlines of the animal
Take an eraser and carefully remove all the construction lines still showing through the bunny drawing. Where necessary, trace the drawing to give it a slightly darker and clearer look. Before applying shading, check the overall symmetry of the bunny’s body and its individual parts.

Step 18: Draw shadows on the bunny
Keep in mind the animal’s volume and the rounded forms of its body parts. Holding the approximate position of the light source in mind, begin adding shadows. First, indicate the division between light and shadow, then carefully fill in the shaded areas with hatching.

Advanced bunny drawing practice
A bunny is a very active animal, and an artist needs to be able to convey its movement with precision. This requires consistent practice and regular repetition of the steps, applying them to different poses.
This is a slightly more advanced level of drawing a bunny and animals in general. For practice, use a variety of references, draw from imagination, and work from memory.

In addition to longer, more detailed drawings that focus on structure, contours, fur, and shading, also make quick sketches of bunnies without focusing on details – aim instead to capture movement, direction, and overall mass.
This kind of regular practice will help you develop a deeper understanding and draw animals more convincingly.

It is also important to extend these skills to other animals with similar characteristics. For example, you can draw a cat using the same principles or apply them to other animals, even combining them into more complex compositions, such as animals playing together or running.
Consistent practice, combined with analysis of your work and a solid understanding of drawing fundamentals, is key to developing a strong and professional drawing skill.







