Our hands are extremely expressive and can form endless amounts of gestures. These gestures can convey many emotions such as fear, anger, sadness and happiness. No wonder they’re so difficult to draw!
I’ll admit I used to draw people with their hands tucked away in their pockets or hidden behind their backs. I would always find ways to hide them because drawing hands was one of my biggest weaknesses. Don’t let it be yours! Tuck your fears away, take your pencils out and let’s practice drawing some hands together!
The easiest way to learn how to draw hands is to first understand its proportions and bone structure. This tutorial will cover how to construct a hand and help you understand it’s proportions but the bone structure is abstract. If you want to see a skeletal diagram of a hand, please click here. I will soon be making a part 2 covering nails, skin and wrinkles. You can follow me on Facebook to get an update whenever I post a new tutorial!
Update: Click here for How to draw hands part 2!
How to Draw a Hand Step by Step
Step 1: Shape the palm
Use an HB pencil to draw a rectangle slightly longer than a square. Make a slope at the top. The right side of the curve will dip down much lower than the left side since we are drawing the back of the right hand. Taper the right side of the rectangle as well.
Step 2: Draw five circles
Draw 4 circles at the top with an even amount of spacing between them. These are the knuckles. Add a 5th circle for the thumb located on the bottom left about 4/5ths of the way down.
Step 3: Measure and draw the fingers
To determine the length of each finger, measure the length from the wrist to the knuckles and duplicate that. The dotted line marks the maximum finger height. Our fingers vary in length and since the middle finger is the longest, we will use it as a reference to find the height of the other 3 fingers. To do that, draw a curved line that is similar to the first one drawn in step 1.
Step 4: Find the joints for each finger
Now that we have all 4 fingers drawn, it’s time to locate each joint. Add 2 more ticks on the middle finger, each roughly 1 quarter of the way down. Using these ticks, draw 2 more curves. We now have reference points for joint placement! Wasn’t so bad, was it? Please note that these are only loose measurements for simplicity sake.
Step 5: Draw circles at each joint
For each finger, draw 2 more circles. Each finger should have 3 circles ranging from small, medium to large from top to bottom.
Step 6: Draw the thumb
For the thumb, draw a curved line coming from the bottom left circle. The height of the thumb will change depending on how far it is spread out. Measure the length of the thumb and draw a circle at the halfway point. Add another circle halfway up from there.
Step 7: Make outlines around the hand
Make an outline around the structure. Increase the fat between each finger joint for chubby-looking hands or decrease the fat while making the joints stick out for a skinnier hand. Humans have some webbing in between each finger, so make sure you connect each finger with webs. Make sure they are not too low. They should be well above the knuckles drawn in step 2. Now that we understand the proportions and how to construct a basic hand, let’s practice drawing different hand gestures. 
Hand Images for Drawing Reference
Feel free to download and use the hand images below for your reference! You may find that it is difficult to use the measurement system for certain gestures. In this case, eye the approximate measurements and remember to implement the use of curved lines when drawing fingers. If you practice enough, you should be able to sketch them without the use of guidelines or better yet, be able to visualize and draw any gesture! Understanding muscles, tendons and fat tissue will help add a layer of realism to your hands. Click here for an interactive 360 degree model. You can view different layers by clicking on the thumbnails at the top.
**Click here for the second part of this tutorial: How to Draw Hands Part 2: Beyond Structure
Have any questions or requests? Leave them in the comments below and I’ll get back to you as soon as possible!

Darlene created RFA In 2013 with the goal of sharing simple yet detailed drawing tutorials with other artists on the world wide web. She is a self taught pencil portrait artist and Youtuber.



Can you add the other hand? I’m using this for a project and i am very bad at reversing like this. thank you so much! (if you see this lol)
This is so great! Really a heartfelt thank you to you for helping me and I am sure countless others in drawing hands, as you meetion yourself is one of the most difficult part to draw in human anatomy! This has been a great help, I started with anime character,could get the rest of him right but the hands! Uhh! This tutorial as really helped me!
Darlene, Great, fantastic, magnificent, outstanding, wonderful and a bunch more. Thanks for being a service to us. I have just discovered you and am eager to see what else you have to offer. I am a Viet Nam Era Veteran and 73. Years ago I spent four years in an accredited university for art. You have taught and demonstrated more here than what I ever received in all those four years. I am just now re-introducing myself into the field.
Oh you are too kind :) Thank you Tom! I’m glad you’re enjoying the tutorials! Welcome to RFA.
Thank U:
its awesome ….Thank u teacher.
It’s great. I loved it. Drawing hands have always been my weakness. Thanks for unloading these techniques.
I accidentally cut off my own hand during step 3 of your tutorial. Is there anything about reattaching hands in part 2? This is time sensitive please respond quickly, if possible. Cheers :)
Darn, didn’t include a fix for that. Sorry man!
I’m trying to learn to draw babies and childrens’ eyes and hands. I’m pro life and have a couple of projects in mind and i’m just learning to draw. Do you have any suggestions?
Tank you this method is very easy
Helped with a project thanks
Hi! Love your tutorials but for some reason whenever I try to download this one (Hands part 1) it says it can’t find the file.
Thanks for your help!
Genevieve Deits
It should be fixed now :)
Wow, this has been so helpfull to me because I used to draw hands just as thick ugly lines so to learn this is amazing. Thanks so much
These tutorials are so fantastic!!! I’m going to use all of them. I already do drawings (faces–front views only) but I’ve been nervous about trying to do more. I’ll post my efforts using your tutorials. Thanks so much!!
Thanks Bobbie, I can’t wait to see your artwork!
I can draw arms, legs, bodies, even hair but I can’t for the life of me draw hands!! Your tutorial looks easy enough, I will try it out and let you know how it goes.. also bookmarking this as I wait for part 2.
Another great tutorial! Can’t wait for part 2.
Thank you :) Part 2 is almost done!