In calligraphy, are printed characters (such as Song Ti and Kai Ti) good characters?

As an art, the beauty of calligraphy lies in that it varies from person to person, and the so-called "writing is not the first". Different works have different impressions; Different audiences have different impressions. To put it bluntly, when artists create works, they have the spirit to seal them in works of art. Throughout the ages, viewers can still produce spiritual songs.

Like music. A piece of music, the score itself is certain, but different people play it, even the same person plays it at different times, and the expressive force is completely different. In contrast, printing is only music score, and calligraphy is performance.

So printing can't be evaluated by calligraphy.

———————————————————— Specifically, italics are, but song styles are not. Because Song Ti is not handwritten, but printed. And calligraphy is handwritten calligraphy.

In other words, the handwritten song style is, but the printed song style is not. One view is that Songti is a thin gold seal.

The calligraphy style is said to have been created by Qin Gui. Because of its notoriety, it is called Song Style rather than Qin Style.

Song Dynasty, its strokes, that is, the small triangles in the lower left corner and the upper right corner of the picture, are a complete combination of straight lines, and the writing with a brush is not smooth.