Draw a Distorted Image
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Create a distorted drawing by tracing a photo onto grid paper, then shifting grid squares to redraw and compare how proportions change.

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Step-by-step guide to draw a distorted image

What you need
Adult supervision required, blank paper, coloring materials, eraser, grid paper, pencil, photo or magazine picture, ruler, scissors, tape

Step 1

Pick a photo with clear shapes and tape it flat to your table so it won't move.

Step 2

Lay the grid paper over the photo and tape the corners so the grid stays exactly on top.

Step 3

Use your pencil to trace the main outlines and important lines of the photo onto the grid paper square by square.

Step 4

Label the columns with letters across the top and the rows with numbers down the side so each square has a coordinate.

Step 5

Cut the traced grid paper along the grid lines into vertical strips that are one square wide.

Step 6

Decide how you will shift the strips (for example move every other strip one square to the right) and keep that plan in mind.

Step 7

Arrange the cut strips on a clean blank sheet in the new shifted order according to your plan without taping yet.

Step 8

Tape each shifted strip down on the blank sheet so the new distorted grid picture stays in place.

Step 9

On a fresh blank sheet, redraw the image square by square by copying what you see in each shifted strip into the corresponding new squares.

Step 10

Erase any extra grid lines or stray pencil marks to make your redrawn picture clean.

Step 11

Add details and refine the shapes so the distorted image looks finished and smooth.

Step 12

Color or shade your distorted drawing using your coloring materials if you want to make it bold and fun.

Step 13

Put the original photo and your distorted drawing side by side to compare how the proportions changed and then share your finished creation on DIY.org

Final steps

You're almost there! Complete all the steps, bring your creation to life, post it, and conquer the challenge!

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Help!?

What can we use if we don't have grid paper or a printed photo?

Draw a square grid on plain paper with a ruler and pencil to replace grid paper, and tape a photo on a tablet or a hand-drawn picture flat to the table in place of a printed photo.

My strips move or tear when I try to rearrange them—how can I prevent that?

After you cut the traced grid paper along the grid lines into vertical strips, label each strip with its column coordinate, cut with sharp scissors against a ruler for straight edges, and tape the grid corners firmly as in the instructions so the strips stay aligned while you arrange them.

How can I adapt this activity for different ages?

For younger children use larger grid squares, help them trace the main outlines and pre-cut the strips, while older kids can use smaller squares, try more complex shifts (for example move every other strip two squares), and spend more time on the 'add details and refine the shapes' and 'color or shade' steps.

How can we make the distorted drawing more creative or shareable?

Experiment by rotating or overlapping some cut strips before you tape them, use colored paper or bold markers when you 'color or shade your distorted drawing', and display the original photo side by side with several shift variations to share on DIY.org.

Watch videos on how to draw a distorted image

Here at SafeTube, we're on a mission to create a safer and more delightful internet. 😊

Parents Turned Their Kids' Drawing Into Artworks

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Facts about grid drawing and proportions

✏️ Tracing paper is semi-transparent so you can copy lines exactly from a photo before you start shifting squares.

🎨 Artists have used grid systems for centuries — ancient Egyptian and Renaissance painters used grids to keep proportions consistent.

😲 Caricature artists exaggerate just a few features — changing one part of a face can make it look funny, scary, or strange.

👀 Optical illusions prove that tiny changes in proportion can trick your brain into seeing motion, depth, or expression.

🧩 The grid method is like a puzzle: shifting a single square can change how your whole drawing looks.

How do I do the Draw a Distorted Image activity with my child?

To do this activity, print or tape a simple photo over grid paper and lightly trace the image into each square using pencil. Cut or mark grid squares on a copy, then shift columns or rows left, right, up, or down and redraw the image square-by-square on fresh grid paper so the subject becomes distorted. Erase guidelines and compare the original and distorted versions. Start with large, simple photos and work slowly.

What materials do I need for Draw a Distorted Image?

You’ll need a printed photo or picture for tracing, two sheets of grid paper (or one grid and one plain sheet you’ve drawn a grid on), a sharp pencil, eraser, ruler, and scissors or a craft knife if you plan to cut grid squares. Optional: tracing paper, washi tape to hold sheets, colored pencils or markers for finishing, and a clipboard or light table to make tracing easier.

What ages is the Draw a Distorted Image activity suitable for?

This activity suits children about 6–12 years old: elementary kids can trace, measure and redraw with growing independence. Younger children (4–5) can try simplified large-grid versions with adult help; older kids and teens can work with smaller grids, more complex photos, or calculate exact shifts for deliberate distortions. Adjust tools and supervision to match fine-motor and attention levels.

What are the benefits of doing Draw a Distorted Image with kids?

This distortion drawing strengthens observation, spatial reasoning, and proportion awareness as kids compare grids. It builds fine motor control, patience, and planning skills while encouraging creative problem-solving and art vocabulary. Comparing original and distorted images also prompts discussions about perspective and proportion. It's a low-cost STEAM activity linking art and basic geometry.
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Draw a Distorted Image. Activities for Kids.