When it comes to practicing calligraphy, many people ask: Do you put paper on a copybook and copy? Are you writing facing each other? How to use a hard pen for calligraphy and writing brushes? Do you want to learn strokes first? (Take a look, do you have any questions?)
I use a metaphor: building a house. To build a house, you first need a drawing, then prepare materials according to the drawing, and then process and combine the materials. The best quality materials combined with high-quality drawings will turn into a building or a high-end villa. With high-quality materials and naive design, it is possible to build a five-star toilet in the city for officials from other places to visit and exchange. Poor quality materials combined with pretty good drawings resulted in a shoddy project. Poor materials and poor design will lead to the toilets in rural areas of the last century. Finally, it is to go to the management department to register and determine the ownership of the building.
So, the process of learning calligraphy is:
1. Choose a good copybook. This will determine your destination for this round of calligraphy practice: a building, a public toilet, or a latrine.
2 Learn how to write high-quality strokes (basic brushwork learning). This determines the outcome of your round of calligraphy practice: high-quality buildings (including buildings and five-star public toilets), shoddy construction, or huts.
3 Practice the combination of strokes: copying, copying as a whole (learning composition). This step determines whether your round of calligraphy practice will result in a mansion or a villa, or a five-star public toilet. Because they were eliminated in the last round of building huts.
4 Learn to write by yourself: including memorizing, memorizing and other steps. Unfortunately, many people only find out at this point: It turns out that I still can’t write when the post comes! ——The house was built in vain!
Well, if some people still don’t understand the steps of practicing calligraphy, there is nothing I can do.