Don’t erase the line from the bottom of the circle since you’ll use it as a guideline for drawing the details of the mask. Make the width of the oval portion 1/2 the size of the circle you drew for the head. If you draw the oval too low, the jaw will be too large.
The waistline is about 3/4 the size of the upper chest.
Round the bottom of the V-shape to draw a realistic crotch. Draw the bottom torso segment 1/2 as wide as the head or chest segment.
Repeat this on the opposite side of the torso to make the other shoulder and upper arm outline.
Draw the bottom of the rectangle so it’s level with the very bottom line of the torso. Repeat this for the other arm.
Remember to do this for the other arm as well.
Do this for the opposite leg too.
Draw these on the opposite leg as well, but make them at a slight angle so it looks like Spiderman is resting his weight on this leg.
Drawing a square-shaped foot makes it look as though the foot is pointing forward.
These triangles are the outlines for the eyes of Spiderman’s mask.
If you prefer, make the top inner corner of the eye curved as well.
Use a ruler if you need help creating perfectly straight lines for the webbing.
Make the bottom webbing lines curve up instead of down since they’re being drawn towards the center of Spiderman’s face.
Make this bold line smooth as you connect the outline shapes.
If you’d like to draw more muscles, sketch a few short horizontal lines that curve up toward Spiderman’s abdomen.
If your Spiderman drawing is small, keep the logo tiny and don’t worry about drawing all of the details.
Make the long segments on the side of the torso as wide or narrow as you like.
Leave a small space between each vertical line. If the lines are too close, you won’t see the webbing.
To make the muscles stand out, shade them in with black colored pencil.