US Trends

how are people making the caricature on face...

People are making those trendy face caricatures mostly with AI photo apps and web tools, plus a smaller group who still hand-draw them digitally or traditionally.

What the question sounds like

You’re basically asking: “What are people using to create those exaggerated, cartoonish faces everyone’s posting?”
Right now (mid‑2020s), that almost always means AI caricature generators that turn a selfie into a stylized portrait in a few seconds.

How people are making caricature faces (quick breakdown)

1. AI apps and websites (most common)

People upload a selfie and let an AI model exaggerate facial features (big eyes, long chin, huge smile, etc.) in a specific style.

Typical flow:

  1. Take a clear selfie (good lighting, full face visible, not covered by hair/hands/sunglasses).
  1. Upload it to an AI caricature site/app.
  2. Pick a style: cute cartoon, hyper‑colorful, comic, 3D avatar, etc.
  1. Adjust intensity with sliders (how big the eyes are, how stretched the face is, etc.), then download and post.

Under the hood, these tools use things like:

  • Face landmark detection to find eyes, nose, mouth and chin.
  • GAN‑style models and style transfer to exaggerate geometry and apply a drawing/painting look.

That’s why it feels like “upload → instant caricature magic.”

2. “Pro” AI caricature platforms

Beyond simple apps, there are platforms focused specifically on caricature and stylized portraits.

They often add:

  • Multi‑image fusion (mixing features from several photos).
  • Consistent caricatures across frames for video or animated avatars.
  • Style marketplaces where artists upload custom caricature styles.

These are popular with creators for social avatars, marketing visuals, and game/VTuber‑style characters.

3. Digital hand-drawn caricatures

Some people still do it “old school” using drawing skills plus a tablet:

  • They start from an average head shape, then stretch or compress head and features (big forehead, long jaw, narrow cheeks, etc.).
  • They push features that stand out—huge smile, long nose, tiny eyes—while keeping the person recognizable.
  • This can be fully freehand or combined with AI (e.g., AI base + manual refinement).

Tutorials show exercises like “opposition sketching”: comparing two faces and exaggerating their differences to train the eye for caricature.

Why these caricatures are suddenly everywhere

A few reasons it feels like everyone is doing this now:

  • Speed & zero skill barrier – turning a photo into a caricature takes seconds and no drawing ability.
  • Social media aesthetics – bright, exaggerated portraits look great as profile pictures, stickers, and story posts.
  • Tech improvements – modern style‑transfer and GAN techniques like CariGAN and 3D facial caricaturization make results look polished and more “artsy” than older filters.
  • Commercial use – brands and creators use these caricatures for marketing visuals, merch, and entertainment content.

Mini “how to” if you want to try it

If your post is aimed at explaining it quickly to forum readers, you could phrase the core idea like:

People aren’t manually painting every caricature you see.
Most of those exaggerated faces are just selfies run through AI caricature generators that detect your facial features, stretch or shrink them, then apply a cartoon or painterly style on top.

Basic advice to get better results:

  • Use a bright, sharp photo with your full face visible.
  • Show some expression (a big smile or strong emotion gives funnier caricatures).
  • Test a few different apps/styles; each model “pushes” features differently.

Bottom note (for your post footer):
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.