Sneaky Fox
117 drawings by Artbitrator players — showing top 24
Foxes are basically tiny tricksters in fur coats, and learning how to draw a sneaky fox means capturing that sly, up-to-no-good attitude. It's all about the lowered head, the flicking tail, and those sharp, alert ears that say 'I'm absolutely plotting something.' Once you get the posture right, the rest just clicks.
We've got 95 sneaky fox drawings from real players here, and they're all brilliant in different ways. Some are all pointy angles and tension, others are fluffier and more mischievous. Watch them get drawn stroke by stroke, then try your own in Artbitrator—our AI judge will guess what you're drawing in real time, and you'll see exactly how your sneaky fox came together.
Drawings
117
Avg Strokes
1747 strokes
Avg Time
101s
Fastest
19s
How to Draw Sneaky Fox
Simple steps to draw sneaky fox, based on what works in the examples above.
- 1 Start with three circles: one for the head, one for the chest, and a bigger one for the body. Foxes have that sleek, stretched-out look, so space them out a bit and think lightweight.
- 2 Add two big triangular ears on top of the head—pointy and alert. Then sketch a teardrop or wedge shape below the head for the elongated snout. Sneaky foxes have sharp noses, not rounded puppy faces.
- 3 For the sneaky posture, lower the body slightly and angle the head forward, like the fox is creeping or listening. Draw a sneaky fox with its weight shifted, maybe one paw raised mid-step.
- 4 Sketch the legs—slim, with a slight bend at the joints to show that prowling tension. Then add the huge bushy tail, curved low or flicking to one side. The tail's the secret weapon for balance and attitude.
- 5 Refine the eyes (narrow slits work brilliantly for sneaky vibes), add a little nose and mouth, and throw in some jagged lines for fur texture around the chest and tail. If you want to practice until you nail the look, draw it in Artbitrator and watch the replay to see where your lines really sold the sneakiness.
Tip: A lowered head and forward-tilted ears instantly make any fox look like it's sneaking, even if the rest is a bit wobbly.
Practice Drawing Sneaky FoxDrawing Tips
- Give the tail a slight curve or S-shape rather than a stiff stick—it adds movement and makes the fox feel alive.
- Narrow the eyes and tilt them slightly down toward the snout; wide-open cartoon eyes kill the sneaky mood fast.
- Don't make the body too bulky—foxes are lean and nimble, so keep the chest smaller than the hips and taper the legs toward delicate paws.
Sneaky Fox Drawing FAQ
How do you draw a sneaky fox?
Start with basic circles for the head and body, add pointy triangular ears and a long snout, then lower the posture and tilt the head forward to get that creeping vibe. Slim legs, a big bushy tail, and narrow eyes finish the look. It's all about the body language—if it looks like it's tiptoeing, you're on the right track.
Is a sneaky fox drawing hard for beginners?
Not really. The tricky bit is nailing the posture—getting that slinky, lowered stance that reads as 'sneaky' instead of just 'sitting.' But if you break it into simple shapes first (circles, triangles, curved lines), it's a pretty easy sneaky fox drawing to pull off.
Where can I practice and save my sneaky fox drawings?
Draw one in Artbitrator! Our AI will guess what you're making as you go, and every finished sneaky fox gets saved so you can replay it stroke by stroke. It's brilliant for spotting what worked (and what didn't), plus you can watch how other people tackled the same prompt.
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