The last two points of the three dots of water in the running script "ze" should be connected together in one go. The height should account for half of the total height of the font. Pay attention to the strokes on the right half, and the last vertical line should be gradual from thick to thin. The closing pen.
The last two points of the three dots of water in the running script "ze" should be connected together in one go. The height should account for half of the total height of the font. Pay attention to the strokes on the right half, and the last vertical line should be gradual from thick to thin. The closing pen.
Running script is a general term, which is divided into two types: Xingkai and Xingcao. It was developed on the basis of regular script and is a font between regular script and cursive script. It was created to make up for the slow writing speed of regular script and the difficulty of identifying cursive script. "Xing" means "walking", so it is not as sloppy as cursive script, nor as straight as regular script. In essence, it is the cursive version of regular script or the regular script version of cursive script. Those with more regular script than cursive script are called "Xing Kai", and those with more cursive script than regular script are called "Xing Cao". Running script has both high practicality and artistry, while regular script is a text symbol, which is highly practical but relatively lacking in artistry. In comparison, cursive script is highly artistic but relatively lacking in practicality.
The most famous representative work of running script is the "Preface to Orchid Pavilion" written by the calligrapher Wang Xizhi of the Eastern Jin Dynasty. The predecessors described his calligraphy as "a dragon leaping over the Tianmen, a tiger crouching on the Phoenix Tower", and was praised as "the most beautiful calligraphy in the world". The first line of writing".