Tips & Techniques

5 Fabric Textures Every Fashion Illustrator Should Master

A beautiful silhouette means nothing if the fabric looks wrong. The difference between a flat fashion sketch and one that jumps off the page? Texture. Here are five essential fabrics and exactly how to render each one.

1. Silk & Satin

Silk is all about high contrast. It's the fabric of extremes: brilliant highlights right next to deep shadows, with almost nothing in between.

How to render it:

Best tools: Copic markers for smooth gradients, or graphite pencil with a blending stump for the pencil approach.

2. Denim

Denim is the opposite of silk: it's stiff, structured, and textured. It holds its shape and creates sharp, angular folds.

How to render it:

Best tools: Sakura Pigma Micron pens for topstitching details, Copic Cool Gray markers for the base.

3. Leather

Leather shares silk's love of contrast, but adds weight and stiffness. It's reflective but rigid.

How to render it:

Best tools: Black Copic marker for the base, white gel pen (Uni-ball Signo) for highlights, Micron pen for edge details.

4. Knit & Wool

Knit fabrics are soft, heavy, and stretchy. They cling to the body and create rounded, organic folds.

How to render it:

Best tools: Prismacolor Col-Erase pencils for the soft, erasable base drawing, then colored pencils for texture details.

5. Chiffon & Sheer Fabrics

Chiffon is the ultimate test of a fashion illustrator's skill. It's transparent, weightless, and floaty. You need to show fabric that's barely there.

How to render it:

Best tools: Tombow Dual Brush pens (the brush tip gives beautiful light washes), or Winsor & Newton watercolors for the most ethereal effect.

The Practice Method

Don't try to master all five at once. Pick one fabric, and for a week, apply it to every design you sketch. Draw a silk evening gown, then a silk blouse, then silk pajamas. By the end of the week, rendering silk will be second nature. Then move to the next fabric.

The fastest way to practice? Use a croquis template so you can skip the figure drawing and focus entirely on the fabric. That's exactly what our sketchbooks are designed for.