Leo+DadMade for Leo
Drawing the Face
Rung 4 of 4 · Mastery

Breaking the Grid on Purpose

Where it all pays off: artists who know the proportions perfectly so they can bend them deliberately — and you doing the same.

Structural frame Builds on: where it gets tricky

Push it Turn the caricature dial from accurate to exaggerated and watch a face travel into a cartoon.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

Proportion was never a cage. It's an instrument, and now you've tuned it you get to play. This is the rung where you stop merely obeying the grid and start using it — which is exactly what the rest of this portraiture unit will ask of you.

Caricature: the Deviations, Turned Up Loud

Rung three taught you that likeness lives in how a face differs from the average. Caricature is simply that idea with the volume cranked. The caricaturist finds a person's biggest deviations — the wide-set eyes, the long chin, the high forehead — and exaggerates exactly those, leaving everything else near normal. That's the magic trick: a good caricature can look more like someone than a photo, because it amplifies the very features your brain uses to recognise them. Slide the dial in the toy and watch which traits the cartoon grabs hold of: they're the same ones that made the face individual in the first place.

The move: to exaggerate well, first nail the accurate face. You can only push a feature "more" if you know precisely where its average sits. The grid is what tells you which way is away.

Why You Learned the Rules So Carefully

Here's the grown-up part: you study proportion precisely so you can break it precisely. A surrealist might stretch a face into a dream; a comic artist flattens it to a few bold strokes; a portrait painter nudges one third a millimetre to catch a mood. None of that is guessing — it's a controlled departure from a grid the artist owns completely. The amateur breaks proportion by accident and the face looks wrong. The master breaks it on purpose and the face comes alive.

Why This Is the Real Finish Line

Spotting the halfway eye line was the "aha". Blocking in the grid made it solid. Reading the deviations made it a likeness. Bending the grid knowingly — accurate when you want truth, exaggerated when you want feeling — that's mastery, and it's exactly what the rest of Framing portraiture, right through to your finished portrait, is going to ask you to do.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

If someone caricatured you, which feature do you reckon they'd seize on first?

Can you name a cartoon or comic character whose whole face is one exaggerated proportion?

Which of the four rungs should we come back and re-drag in a fortnight?