9 Lessons
Terryl Whitlatch introduces her workshop, which establishes a structured approach to creature design that prioritizes anatomical accuracy as the foundation for creative stylization. By starting with real animals and learning how to adapt them for various artistic styles, artists can create creatures that feel believable across different media formats, from realistic to highly stylized cartoon applications.
Duration: 40s
This lesson emphasizes that successful creature drawing requires solid anatomical knowledge as the foundation for surface rendering. By understanding how bones provide framework and muscles create form, artists can learn how to create more convincing and dimensional representations of animals. Terryl’s holistic approach to the entire drawing, while constantly referencing the underlying structure, illustrates that drawing is ultimately about translating three-dimensional forms into two dimensions through careful observation and anatomical understanding.
Duration: 31m 28s
This lesson illustrates that strong foundational knowledge of realistic anatomy is essential for successful character simplification. Terrly teaches how, by thoroughly studying the actual structure first, artists gain the freedom to stylize effectively while maintaining believability and recognition. The result is "Rubio," a grumpy bull character that can work efficiently in various production formats while retaining clear, recognizable bovine characteristics.
Duration: 9m 51s
This lesson showcases how to create a believable fantasy creature by grounding imaginative design in real anatomical knowledge. By systematically applying understanding of actual bovine anatomy while thoughtfully integrating dinosaur features, Terryl produces a creature that feels both fantastical and biologically plausible. Her emphasis on anatomical accuracy and film-ready design illustrates professional creature design principles where creative vision must balance with practical believability.
Duration: 10m 12s
In this lesson, Terryl emphasizes that successful creature design requires more than visual appeal. More so, it demands thoughtful consideration of how a creature would realistically exist in its environment. By grounding fantastical designs in authentic anatomical principles and ensuring that every feature serves a survival purpose, artists can learn how to create believable characters that audiences accept as "real" within their fictional worlds. Her holistic approach to drawing, while maintaining a focus on storytelling and environmental context, offers valuable insights for anyone working in entertainment design for games, films, or other media.
Duration: 26m 4s
This lesson showcases markers as a sophisticated, versatile medium for professional concept art, bridging traditional and digital workflows. Terryl emphasizes that successful creature design requires solid foundational knowledge of anatomy, color theory, and lighting principles, regardless of medium. By combining classical painting techniques with modern marker technology, artists can learn how to produce fast, professional results with tangible artwork that remains compatible with digital production pipelines, making markers an invaluable tool for concept artists working under tight deadlines in the animation, film, and game design industries.
Duration: 33m 37s
This lesson emphasizes that successful creature design requires a foundation in real anatomy combined with imaginative storytelling. By grounding fantasy elements in observable natural phenomena and maintaining consistent anatomical logic, artists can learn how to create believable creatures that exist convincingly in their imagined worlds. Terryl shows how traditional media, such as Copic markers, can work efficiently alongside digital workflows while keeping hands-on art skills sharp.
Duration: 9m 25s
This lesson effectively shows how artists can adapt realistic character designs into simplified, commercially viable cartoon versions. Terryl explains why the key lies in strong foundational work (the realistic rendering) that enables creative freedom in the simplification phase, and successful character design, which requires understanding both anatomical accuracy and stylistic trends that appeal to target audiences across different markets.
Duration: 5m 33s
This final lesson demonstrates the completed versions of all the concept pieces created throughout this workshop with Terryl's closing comments and insights.
Duration: 1m 6s
Skills Covered
Who’s this Workshop for?
This workshop is aimed at intermediate to advanced artists who want to develop believable creature designs grounded in real-world anatomy. It is especially valuable for concept artists, illustrators, and designers working in film, games, animation, or publishing who need to create original creatures that feel biologically plausible rather than purely decorative.
Art students, traditional illustrators, and artists transitioning into creature design will also benefit from the structured approach Terryl Whitlatch uses to connect anatomy, environment, and behavior to visual design. Artists looking to strengthen their portfolios with thoughtfully designed creatures that demonstrate both realism and imagination will find this workshop particularly useful.
Learning Outcomes
By completing this workshop, artists will gain a strong understanding of how to design convincing fantasy creatures by transforming familiar animals into imaginative yet believable designs.
Key skills include:
- How to study real animal anatomy and use it as a foundation for creature design.
- How to develop creature concepts through thumbnails, studies, and progressive refinement.
- How to translate skeletal and muscular structures into convincing surface anatomy.
- How to indicate form, volume, and planes clearly in creature drawings.
- How to use traditional tools such as pencils, markers, and tracing paper in a professional workflow.
- How to design creatures based on lifestyle, environment, and functional needs.
- How to apply color thoughtfully to support form, mood, and storytelling.
- How to reinterpret realistic designs into stylized or humorous variations for portfolio range.








