How to write a Spring Festival handwritten newspaper is as follows:
Understand the culture and history related to the Spring Festival, and appreciate the cultural customs of different regions. Try using a variety of materials or tools to make small gifts for the Chinese New Year. Express the beautiful scenes of the Spring Festival in your memory through painting.
First of all, we need to write the words "Happy Spring Festival" as the title in the blank space at the top of the handwritten newspaper, and then draw a big lantern in the blank space to the left of the title. Add two text boxes with different shapes in the handwritten newspaper, and then add a little girl's pattern above the text box in the lower left corner. Add patterns such as colorful flags, red envelopes, ingots, and firecrackers to the handwritten newspaper, and then draw a wavy border along the edge of the handwritten newspaper.
Contents of the Spring Festival handwritten newspaper
1. Origin of the Spring Festival The Spring Festival has a history of three or four thousand years in our country. It was called "New Year's Day" in ancient times. "Yuan" means beginning, "Dan" means morning, and "New Year's Day" is the first morning of the year. There are many origins and legends about it...
2. Introduction to the Spring Festival: The Spring Festival is the most solemn and distinctive traditional festival among Chinese people, and it is also the most lively ancient festival. Generally refers to New Year's Eve and the first day of the first lunar month, which is the first day of the year, also called the lunar year, commonly known as "New Year". But among the people, the Spring Festival in the traditional sense refers to the period from the twelfth lunar month on the eighth day of the twelfth lunar month, or the twelfth lunar month on the 23rd or 24th day of the twelfth lunar month, to the fifteenth day of the first lunar month, with New Year's Eve and the first day of the first lunar month as the climax.
3. The Spring Festival was known as "Zhengdan", "New Year's Day", "New Year", etc. in ancient times. On December 31, 1911, the Hubei military government of the Republic of China issued the "Encyclical of the Ministry of Internal Affairs on the Switch to the Gregorian Calendar in the Republic of China", clearly referring to the New Year's Day as the "Spring Festival".
4. An ancient poem about the Spring Festival: Yuan Dynasty (Song Dynasty) Wang Anshi
With the sound of firecrackers, the new year comes, and the spring breeze brings warmth to Tusu; New peaches replace old talismans.