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Quick panda face paint tutorial

Does your kid want to be a werewolf for Halloween? Or maybe he likes pretending to be a cat? Turn him into his favourite creatures with these fun and easy face-painting tutorials.


Red Panda Face Painting Tutorial

I hope you enjoy this red panda face painting tutorial.

PICTORIAL:

TUTORIAL:

Step 1: I did an outline in gray to get the shapes down. I was looking at the source image of the real red panda. I used 4 total colors and 4 brushes to create this look, so I wanted to take the real image and simplify it down to those color areas.

Step 2: I filled in the white areas with Mehron Paradise white with a flat brush. Working from light to dark is always easiest.

Step 3: I used light brown next with the same 3/4″ flat brush to fill in above my brown and on the edges of my face.

Step 4: With dark brown and a 1/2″ flat brush I did the lines down my cheeks, the top of my forehead, and inside the ears. I also covered my eyelids and did the little curve around the white tufts above my eyes. I used a semi dry brush to blend the light and dark brown areas when they touched.

Step 5: Using black, I started filling in the very top of my forehead and blending down. Then I did the inside of the ears. Then from the base of my chin up into the dark brown stripe. I did black all along the edges of my face and blended it it.

Step 6: I used a small round brush with black to line my eyes and draw the line from nose to mouth. I did the little whisker dots with the same small brush. Using a #5 round, I did my nose in black and feathered out on the bottom of my chin.

Step 7: I used a #2 round with white to do whiskers. The trick to whiskers is confident quick strokes. No shaky, slow hands! I also went back into all my white ares, and created a fur look by making quick brush strokes out in the direction fur would grow.

Step 8: My final step was to make fur using the browns. With the #2 and #5, I made a variety of fur marks from the ears and stripes down my face where the browns overlapped. I wanted to create a realistic effect, so there are multiple layers of fur making with different size brushes.

Zombie Doll

She’s ALIVE! This spooky look is surprisingly easy to do. Get the face painting tutorial: Zombie Doll

11 easy Halloween face painting tutorials

Photo: Erik Putz

Werewolf

Your little wolf will howl with glee when he sees himself in the mirror. Hope it’s a full moon tonight. Get the face painting tutorial: Werewolf

11 easy Halloween face painting tutorials

Photo: Erik Putz

Unicorn

Your kid will be the most magical trick-or-treater in the neighbourhood with this colourful look. Time to chase some rainbows. Get the face painting tutorial: Unicorn

11 easy Halloween face painting tutorials

Photo: Erik Putz

7 quick, easy face paint tutorials for kids this Halloween: Great last-minute costume trick.

7 quick, easy face paint tutorials for kids this Halloween: Great last-minute costume trick.

Take it from an ex-face painter: Face painting doesn’t have to be hard for you — or on your kid. The first rule of Face Paint Club is to avoid using the crummy cheap face paints that are sometimes sold at grocery stores. They tend to be coated in chemicals and are sometimes expired too.

It’s important to buy quality face paints for kids, which you can probably get at your local craft store or even on Amazon.

I’m a big fan of Snazaroo face paints, which are non-toxic, washable, paraben- and fragrance-free, and made for sensitive skin. Order if you have time, or just take a trip to your local craft store to pick up some face paints that are super safe for kids and easy to wash off.

Also, while you’re there, grab some cheap brush packs for face painting, cosmetic sponges, and cosmetic (not craft!) body glitter because, why not?

Once you’ve got your supplies in hand, you need to come up with a look. The second rule of Face Paint Club is to find a great tutorial and copy it. Because, like we said, quick and easy. Here are 7 of our favorite face paint tutorials for kids this Halloween.

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Lily Pebbles offers three quick looks for little kids, including pumpkins, Spider-Man, and Frankenstein.

This quick, 4-minute video shows you how to do three simple looks for kids: Pumpkins, Spider-Man, or Frankenstein (as shown at top). Check her video for some great tips, including the use of a sponge for the base layer and quality brushes for the black and white lines and details. What I like best about this one is that the painting is done on very young children, proving to all us naysayers out there that it really is possible to do good, quick work on kids (even if you have to bribe them with a cookie).

Easy, quick tiger face paint costume look for little kids | lisajoyyoung

This face paint tutorial for kids starts out with tons of reassurance and tips for painting very young kids, which can help boost your confidence if you’ve never tried it before. In it, she shows us how much faster face painting goes with a sponge loaded with several colors. Lisa Joy uses a special, pre-made sponge, but you can load up any makeup sponge the same way by painting on the colors with a brush. She also has fabulous tips for doing tiger stripes like a pro.

Quick and easy kitty cat face paint Halloween makeup tutorial | Silly Heather

Knowing how to paint a quick cat face will serve you well at birthday parties as well as Halloween. This version focuses on simple black lines to define the face in lieu of all-over face paint, which is a great choice for little ones who tend to drag a fist over an itchy nose. Once you’ve watched her creation, you should be able to do this kitty face in under 5 minutes. Be sure to read the tips that flash on-screen too. We’re not down with the brief quip that Spider-Man is only for boys, but we love the rest of her smart tips and tricks.

Easy face paint Halloween makeup tutorial for Batman or Batgirl from iVillage, FaceArtbyMelissa.com

Trust me: When you’re the designated face painter at your kid’s birthday, school carnival day, or Halloween party, you do a lot of Batman. We love Face Art by Melissa’s Batman mask (or uh, “the caped crusader”) that she shared with iVillage. You don’t even have to do the fancy sunset, if you don’t want to. And in less than 2 minutes, you can pull off the black mask on even the wiggliest kid. Add a full costume or a pair of Batman footie pajamas, and you’re ready for trick-or-treat.

Smiffy

If you can forgive the ’80s music and graphics, this is a quick, easy, super-helpful tutorial of a basic puppy dog face. You can of course switch up your colors to match the costume, and you don’t have to do that floppy tongue (although, so cute!). But of all the puppy tutorials I combed through, this one did the best job of combining quickness with a great finished product. Now, just add pajamas in your color of choice for a cool Halloween costume!

Easy sparkly spider witch Halloween face paint makeup tutorial from SophiesTips.

The voiceover on this tutorial is what really makes this one special. Sophie describes the reasoning for every tool and color, adding options for older or younger children and walking you through the each of her tips, which makes pulling off this look at lot less scary for noobs. Although the overall idea here is a pretty witch, I could see the same colors and glitter combo used for a mermaid, unicorn, or fairy. My daughter wants to be Medusa, so I’m going to use Sophie’s tutorial but with green and gold to match her snake wig.

Easy quick zombie doll makeup Halloween tutorial we found at Today

For the older kid who wants to be cool and creepy, but not too creepy, I love this zombie doll look by face painter Misty Fox for Today’s Parent. It doesn’t take a ton of fancy makeup, and it can work with a Goodwill dress or something ragged from the back of the closet. You don’t have to do the wig and you can skip the false eyelashes; it would work just as well with drawn-on eyelashes and Wednesday Addams braids.

I think this is a cool way to do zombie without all the fake blood and gore. Unless, like me, you like fake blood, which can be easily and cheaply made from Karo syrup and red food coloring, if you were wondering.

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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