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Inkfish7 — Writing Better Character Descriptions
Published: 2012-06-05 20:16:34 +0000 UTC; Views: 46308; Favourites: 2846; Downloads: 0
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Writing Better Character Descriptions

We writers have a particularly tough job: bringing nonexistent people (our characters) to life in our readers’ imaginations. While it’s never easy, we usually accomplish this magic by writing each character with two qualities in mind:

1) Their personality

2) Their physical appearance

Personality is usually expressed through characterization, and appearance through physical description. Admittedly, that doesn't sound so complicated.

But there are two things I’ll suggest today: first, that description needs to do more than just craft appearance, and second, it’s good characterization, more than anything, that’s the key to conjuring vivid characters.


Character Description:

Let’s take a look at the following example.

1) When I entered Mr. Smith's office, he stood from his desk and smiled. He had a big nose, brown eyes, and short, blond hair. He wore a dark suit. I shook his hand.

What can you tell me about Mr. Smith from this brief scene? The physical details tell us he has a big nose, brown eyes, and short, blond hair. He’s wearing a dark suit. You can visualize him—but I wonder, can you tell me anything about his personality? His life or past? I suppose you could gather he’s a businessman, considering the suit and office, but what does his big nose say? His brown eyes? His short, blond hair?

Although these details provide an image, what they don’t really do is tell a story. Effective details do, giving readers a glimpse of the grit and eccentricity of the character.

With that in mind, let’s take another crack at this scene, but this time using storytelling details.


2) When I entered Mr. Smith's office, he stood from his desk and smiled. He wore a dark suit, with the shirt collar unbuttoned to reveal the red plume of an ascot. I shook his hand. The knuckles were rough, callused, his grip strong.

Now what can you tell me about Mr. Smith? Well, looking at the suit and ascot, we can tell he has a flamboyant sense of style. There’s confidence there, too, because really, nobody’s pulled off an ascot this well since Fred Jones. As for his rough, callused knuckles and strong grip, maybe he used to work with his hands. Or maybe he isn’t unfamiliar with knocking a few heads together now and again.

This should conjure a far more compelling image of Mr. Smith in your imagination. The key, again, is storytelling details. You need purpose with your descriptions, an aim or goal. As for those "checklist" details, the details you include to satisfy an imaginary quota (like his big nose, brown eyes, and short, blond hair), they're more often than not worth cutting.

Surprise the reader! Avoid the expected in your descriptions, and your character's nuances and personality will come to life.

As for how to do this, the simplest tip I can give is to be specific.


Specificity:

Not just a dark suit, but a suit with the shirt unbuttoned to reveal a red ascot. Not just a handshake, but the feeling of callused knuckles. When you get specific, the details will start to say something about your characters, whether you want them to or not.

For example, if Lucas tells you he wears cologne, you don’t learn much about him. But how does your image of him change when you hear he spritzes his neck every morning with Acqua di Gio? Or gasses his chest with Axe Body Spray? Heck, I once knew a kid who'd spray himself with Fabreze after gym class.

We’re all human and love to make assumptions. All we need are the tiniest details to get started, and hey, if the fish are biting…


Deciding on Details:

To figure out the details appropriate for your character, you could sit down and fill out a character sheet if you'd like: DeviantArt has a bunch of them. But really, I think you just need to start writing, build on your characters as you go, and think about how their personalities might be expressed through description.

But here's a quick word of advice: don't feel the need to spend paragraphs describing your characters. Some writers do, and some writers don't. I used to write heavy descriptions because I thought that was good writing, but it didn't feel natural, and when I finally eased up, it was like a breath of fresh air. You can't write like someone else. You need to write like you.

However, I will say one last thing on the topic.


Characterization over Description:

Character descriptions aren’t actually necessary. Characterization is necessary, but stories can flourish even with very little character description.

My favorite example of an author who understands this is Orson Scott Card. If you read any of his books, you'll quickly realize how little time he spends describing his characters. You're often given only age, gender, and ethnicity to go off of, cold imageless facts, but his characters still come to life. Why? Because of his excellent characterization. We already picture the characters on the intimate level of the soul, so we don't need visual details to carry us along.

There's an argument that goes: the more you describe a character, the more you tear down the image already formed in the reader's mind, an image the reader quite liked; and I believe that's true. At least, it's true for me when I read a story, so I incorporate that into how I write.

Some people think otherwise. They like to be fully immersed in an author's vision, to see as the author sees, and so they revel in heavy description. That's fine, too. We need both types writers for both types of readers.

The choice is yours. What's important, whether you go heavy or light, is that your details shouldn't be of the checklist variety. They need to have purpose, direction. You shouldn't have to tell us that Lisa is a brunette with hazel eyes and high cheekbones. You don’t need to give us her hair color, eye color, height, weight, bust, yada yada. Just guide us to what's important, and we'll do the rest.

In parting, here’s a phrase worth keeping in mind: it's not how much you describe, but what you choose to describe that matters.

After all, you could describe every hair on your character's head, every pimple, if you wanted to. But who’d want to read that?


Enjoy my work? Follow me on Tumblr!
I don't know if you looked at the publish date of this guide, but I wrote it 7 years ago in college. Since then, I've earned an MFA in Fiction, spent a year teaching writing, and now work as a copywriter in New England. I also no longer post on DeviantArt.

But if you'd like more writing advice like you read above, just with an extra 7 years of experience, stop on by my Tumblr, MichaelBjorkWrites , where I post weekly writing advice.

Visit MichaelBjorkWrites.tumblr.com



Related content
Comments: 595

Muuzariel In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 05:10:03 +0000 UTC]

Thanks again!! X3 i have to read your work at some point for sure. X3

also, if you aren't busy, could i ask your opinion on [link] ? not that long but i think it's a decent example of my writing style.

i wont take offense if you have other things you need to do first!

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Inkfish7 In reply to Muuzariel [2012-06-06 05:15:37 +0000 UTC]

Haha, I'd appreciate that.

And sure thing! I'll take a look at your story in a bit.

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Muuzariel In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-06 05:18:12 +0000 UTC]

X3 YOU'RE AWESOME!!! *thanks you forever* XDD

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Inkfish7 In reply to Muuzariel [2012-06-06 05:30:48 +0000 UTC]

No problem! I really enjoyed your piece. Feel free to ask my opinion anytime

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Muuzariel In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-06 05:35:25 +0000 UTC]

I SHALL INDEED!! I'm thrilled that you liked it. X3

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Euxiom In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 04:15:09 +0000 UTC]

Haha. Awhile ago I was reading up about Ender's Game. I guess this is more proof I should read it?

Nice article, nice points.

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Inkfish7 In reply to Euxiom [2012-06-06 05:06:28 +0000 UTC]

You most definitely should read Ender's Game! It is my second favorite book, my first being its sequel, Speaker for the Dead.

And thanks! I'm glad you found it helpful

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Euxiom In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-06 21:02:16 +0000 UTC]

It sounds like an exciting series. Although, I have big doubts on whether it'll become my favorite XD

Yes! I never really thought about it this way, but now that it's been bluntly pointed out I can see how some of my favorite authors have used it.

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Inkfish7 In reply to Euxiom [2012-06-06 21:29:21 +0000 UTC]

Haha, don't worry; if it doesn't become your favorite, I'll find a way to forgive you.

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amiamy111 In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 04:13:19 +0000 UTC]

ooh helpful~

but a quick qustion what if the characters looks ARE inportant to you? like what I wanna desribe their hair and such is that still okay? and how should it be handled?

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Inkfish7 In reply to amiamy111 [2012-06-06 04:31:16 +0000 UTC]

Well... I suppose it depends how you choose to go about it. Because you can describe their hair and eyes in ways that characterize. For example, an intricate hairstyle would say a lot about a girl. A ponytail would also have connotations, and you could slip in the fact it's blonde without much trouble: "Her blonde hair was pulled back into a ponytail." Doesn't waste much time, either.

Just know one thing: just because you tell the readers how your character looks, doesn't mean they're going to remember. Unless their appearance is important to their personality or life, it's very easy to forget hair colors and eye colors, which once again begs the question of whether they should have been brought up in the first place.

Some of the few characters whose exact appearances I can remember even now are the three main characters of Harry Potter. But that's only because their appearances meant so much. Harry's hair was messy and black, like his father's, and behind those spectacles, his eyes were emerald, like his mother's (genetic connections to parents he never met); Ron's hair was bright red, and he had freckles (a genetic badge for the Weasley family); Hermione had ragged brown hair and large teeth (a reflection of her bookworm nature and her general apathy towards beauty). As you can see, those character appearances are so memorable because their appearances were so tied into their characters. If it isn't like that for your characters, then details will likely bounce off the reader rather than stick.

Otherwise, you have to really ask the question of who you're writing for. Yourself, or your audience. If it's the latter, you'll definitely want to consider limiting the pointless details. For their sake.

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amiamy111 In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-06 04:35:53 +0000 UTC]

ahh I see so, quickly describe the details of the character?

like, if I said the " girl had short black hair with red streaks" that might give readers an idea she is rebellious..? but dont go overboard with describing each and every little detail of her fingernail?

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Inkfish7 In reply to amiamy111 [2012-06-06 04:46:34 +0000 UTC]

Yeah, that sounds about right. But you know what? Don't limit yourself too much. Get the image you want across. Just make sure that image serves a purpose (the girl whose hair is black with red streaks is a perfect example, especially because a girl who puts that effort into her hair obviously finds her appearance important).

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msfcatlover In reply to amiamy111 [2012-06-06 04:27:44 +0000 UTC]

I can help with that!
It's best done subtly. Don't mound descriptions on in first impressions, spread them out.
Let's say I have a character I want to describe. Maybe her friends joke about being surprised to see her out in the sun, or she has a pass to get out of gym class. Her glasses might slide down her nose, forcing her to shove them back up in irritation. She might idly slide a lock of mousy brown hair back behind her ear, and her brother might call her Shorty.
What I just did was tell the reader she's frail, pale, wears glasses, has brown hair that does not stay in place, and is, at the very least, shorter than her brother. And the best part is that all of these can be casually dropped into the story over a period of time, causing readers to adjust their mental image of the character without really realizing it, to fit what I've told them.

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amiamy111 In reply to msfcatlover [2012-06-06 04:37:34 +0000 UTC]

thank you! so sometimes just desribing the characters everyday lifestyles can help to?

like if I say she painted a lot people might think she always covered in paint splatters and is creative?

( oh and btw I got an image of a geeky girl xD )

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msfcatlover In reply to amiamy111 [2012-06-06 04:51:13 +0000 UTC]

Look at people who paint and notice what parts of their work stick to them (often literally) Almost everyone I know who paints has tinted smears on their hands, or splatters on the ends of their sleaves, or flecks of paint perpetually caught under their nails. Toss in things like that. The assumtion that she paints will be automatic if she's always got some on her somewhere, and you only have to mention it a couple times to give people that impression. Creativity is connected to art, and painting is art, so that's another thing you're giving them.
Use the appearence of the character to say something about them, and full scenes to expand on it.

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T0m1n8or In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 04:09:38 +0000 UTC]

This is a great lesson to all. I'm gonna fave this to remind me on what I'm doing right and wrong.

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Inkfish7 In reply to T0m1n8or [2012-06-06 04:31:28 +0000 UTC]

Haha, thanks. Glad you like it

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T0m1n8or In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-06 04:55:05 +0000 UTC]

You're welcome.

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RobertStudio22 In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 04:07:58 +0000 UTC]

sorry wrong tab on the Adobe Illustrator comment
Very good advice here. Thank you!

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Inkfish7 In reply to RobertStudio22 [2012-06-06 04:31:57 +0000 UTC]

Haha, glad you found it useful.

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RobertStudio22 In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-06 04:36:23 +0000 UTC]

it is im reading it over again very helpful

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ChojinRyu750 In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 04:07:41 +0000 UTC]

awesome

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Inkfish7 In reply to ChojinRyu750 [2012-06-06 04:32:47 +0000 UTC]

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RobertStudio22 In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 04:06:52 +0000 UTC]

Adobe Illustrator

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Inkfish7 In reply to RobertStudio22 [2012-06-06 04:32:25 +0000 UTC]

Microsoft Word.

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DEVOTEDrandomSKETCH In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 04:00:36 +0000 UTC]

Very enlightening, thank you so much! =3

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Inkfish7 In reply to DEVOTEDrandomSKETCH [2012-06-06 04:32:52 +0000 UTC]

No problem!

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NEFTGriffin In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:59:18 +0000 UTC]

Quite helpful. At the very, very least, you have told me I could be much worse. Certainly things to keep in mind. Being far from face oriented myself, I usually cannot even begin to picture the facial descriptions that are sometimes launched my way.

Something I feel people should also consider is who is doing the describing. In any point of view where the reader is stuck in a character's head, like the ever-popular first person, what is described says a lot about the person doing it. Some characters are just focused on different things. A character who does not often make eye contact will not likely mention eyes, or one who has always had trouble with the opposite gender might carry the description of a crush on for just a sentence too long. XD
A lot of people need to pay more mind to descriptions. Not only does the tough Not-Girly-at-All character probably have no place gushing descriptions about what someone is wearing for a page and a half, but many people will not suffer a read through that.

Long comment is long. I...I am so sorry. Hahaha

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Inkfish7 In reply to NEFTGriffin [2012-06-06 04:34:27 +0000 UTC]

No, not at all! Thanks for writing this out. It's a very good point, and I hope others will read it when skimming the comments.

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Bubbletea-Coyote In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:55:03 +0000 UTC]

Useful!

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Inkfish7 In reply to Bubbletea-Coyote [2012-06-06 04:34:43 +0000 UTC]

Thanks!

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Bubbletea-Coyote In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-10 21:48:35 +0000 UTC]

No problem.

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billytheixi In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:53:16 +0000 UTC]

This is very helpful! Thank you!

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Inkfish7 In reply to billytheixi [2012-06-06 04:34:49 +0000 UTC]

No problem!

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Chingaruna In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:53:02 +0000 UTC]

Mind if you give more detail version?

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Inkfish7 In reply to Chingaruna [2012-06-06 04:35:19 +0000 UTC]

Pardon?

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PervertOnAChain In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:52:52 +0000 UTC]

Very good advice here. Thank you!

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Inkfish7 In reply to PervertOnAChain [2012-06-06 04:35:29 +0000 UTC]

Glad you liked it!

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V-Max-S In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:48:07 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for this! This is such so wonderfully helpful!

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Inkfish7 In reply to V-Max-S [2012-06-06 04:35:40 +0000 UTC]

Glad to hear it!

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ragamuffin009 In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:47:38 +0000 UTC]

Awesome.

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Inkfish7 In reply to ragamuffin009 [2012-06-06 04:35:47 +0000 UTC]

Haha, thanks.

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ragamuffin009 In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-06 05:09:30 +0000 UTC]

Seriously I usually find writing guides to be tedious, shitty and unhelpful, but this one's actually informative. I really like it.

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Inkfish7 In reply to ragamuffin009 [2012-06-06 05:16:36 +0000 UTC]

Haha, well as long as it's not shitty, I'm going to call it a win

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ragamuffin009 In reply to Inkfish7 [2012-06-06 05:18:00 +0000 UTC]

It certainly isn't XD

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Inkfish7 In reply to ragamuffin009 [2012-06-06 05:31:05 +0000 UTC]

Success!

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RiffRaffit In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:45:24 +0000 UTC]

Simply brilliant as far as helping with descriptions is concerned. My friends and I often fall into the trap of adding too much unnecessary detail--this is exactly what we need. Should be required reading for story-form creative writing, no matter the length!

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Inkfish7 In reply to RiffRaffit [2012-06-06 03:47:56 +0000 UTC]

Haha, thanks. I'm glad you found it useful!

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Caiktin In reply to ??? [2012-06-06 03:44:14 +0000 UTC]

Thank you so much for this! It'll be incredibly handy when I go and edit (and edit, and edit ...) my novel once I've finished it. Very helpful, thanks again

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