How to write three-dimensional characters by hand

The process of handwritten three-dimensional characters is as follows:

1. According to the principle that light shines from one direction, remove the lines that can be irradiated by light, leave the lines at the projection, draw two parallel straight lines with appropriate spacing, and write the words you want in the middle.

2. Through experiments, choose the light in the upper left corner, the stereoscopic effect is the best, choose the projection direction, and draw a stereoscopic effect. Need a certain amount of space imagination.

3. The crossing of strokes is the key. You have to imagine the three-dimensional hollow cross coloring first, and you can draw a shadow effect if you have the ability.

Chinese character

Chinese characters, also known as Chinese characters, Chinese characters and square characters, belong to morpheme syllables of ideographic characters. Chinese characters are written Chinese characters and borrowed from Japanese, Korean, Vietnamese and other languages. They are widely used in the cultural circle of Chinese characters, and they are also the only highly developed characters that are still widely used in the world.

Chinese characters in a broad sense refer to the characters from Oracle Bone Inscriptions, Dazhuan, Jinwen, Lishu and Xiaozhuan to Lishu, cursive script and regular script, while Chinese characters with standard block letters in a narrow sense are also modern Chinese characters widely used today. Chinese characters were invented and improved by ancient Han ancestors. Now the exact history can be traced back to Oracle Bone Inscriptions of Zhang Wen and Jin Wen, about the Shang Dynasty in 65438 BC+0300 BC.

Chinese characters have developed to a highly complete level in ancient times. They are not only used in China, but also used as the only international communication language in East Asia for a long time. Before the 20th century, they were the official written and standardized characters of Japan, the Korean Peninsula, Vietnam and other countries, and all East Asian countries created their own Chinese characters to some extent.