How to write strokes on the opposite side?

How to write strokes for points: the left point is high, the right point is low, and the pen receiving position is the same.

The opposite view:

Generally used as a font, the left point is high and the right point is low, and the pen receiving position is consistent. In order to maintain the center of gravity, stretch the top of the support horizontally at about two points, and the included angle should not be too small to avoid the feeling of top-heaviness. The difficulty lies in the pen cutting of the skimming point and the extension direction of the left and right points. The extension lines of two points generally intersect at 90 degrees.

In fact, the antithesis point is composed of short strokes and reverse strokes, which is relatively simple, but the antithesis point is slightly different from block letters, and it is introverted and neat. Block letters pay more attention to the change of reverse strokes and the distance and position between two points. The dots on the left are usually lighter and longer, and the dots on the right are slightly heavier but shorter, forming a balance of power. See the examples in the ancient posts for details.

History of China's calligraphy development;

Calligraphy is a unique art in China. It is recognized by academic circles as the earliest ancient Chinese characters in China, including Oracle Bone Inscriptions and bronze inscriptions in the middle and late Shang Dynasty. These earliest Chinese characters already have many factors of the formal beauty of calligraphy, such as the beauty of lines, the beauty of character modeling, the beauty of change and the beauty of composition. The evolution trend of Chinese characters is from complexity to simplicity, which is reflected in fonts and glyphs. However, the artistry of calligraphy is enriched with the change of calligraphy style.

China's calligraphy evolved from seal script, official script, cursive script, regular script and running script. From Shu to Jin and Tang Dynasties, running script and regular script became the main writing forms. Wang Xizhi's calligraphy was highly respected in the Tang Dynasty. The highly developed calligraphy and talented calligraphers in the Tang Dynasty had a wide and far-reaching influence on the eastern countries. Japanese writing and calligraphy originated in China.