Handwritten calligraphy video course

The video tutorial of skinny calligraphy is as follows: skinny calligraphy tutorial

Calligraphers in China have always had a special liking for the cursive script "Shou", and Su Bo is no exception. This birthday copybook is beautiful and elegant, vigorous and bold, and its brushwork is like a dragon, which is amazing in one go.

According to Su Bo, this birthday calligraphy was written after he was a guest at a head's house and was drunk. After writing, I found the last mistake, which was the last one of the long words in China traditional cursive script?

The first (pinyin: shà u) is a kind of words in the General Standard of Chinese. The word first appeared in bronze inscriptions in the early Western Zhou Dynasty, which originally meant longevity and extended to the duration of life. It is also used as a verb. Life also refers to the birthdays of middle-aged and elderly people. Shou also declined politely, which was used to bury the dead.

The word "shou" in pictophonetic inscriptions has an up-and-down structure, and the upper part is expressed by the image of the old man; The lower part is the initial text of the word "domain" in Tianchou, and its ancient ridge shape is used as the phonetic symbol of the word "shou" here.

Ancient books such as bronze inscriptions and the Book of Songs in the Western Zhou Dynasty all mean longevity, and longevity is the original meaning of longevity. Some inscriptions add a "you" to indicate the hand below; Others add a "mouth" at the bottom left, which is seal script and Chinese printed version of Shuowen; Some also add "mouth" and "you" at the same time.

"Mouth" may mean a wine glass, and the combination of "mouth" and "you" means toasting the elderly and wishing them a long life. This glyph has been spread to Qin bamboo slips and silk books in the Han Dynasty. From the Warring States period to the bamboo slips and silks in the Han Dynasty, and then to the bamboo slips and slips in the Eastern Han Dynasty, this structure of longevity characters is common. The first letter of modern traditional Chinese characters comes from the official script of Han Dynasty.

After the Han Dynasty, "you" wrote "existence". After printed books began to appear in the Tang Dynasty, the shape of Shouzi, which was passed down from mouth to mouth, was adopted as the appropriate subject, and other shapes and structures of Shouzi were no longer common, only Han Li's Shouzi survived. The simplified Chinese character Shouzi, which is popular now, has taken shape in Dunhuang Han bamboo slips, and it is written in Figure C; By the Tang Dynasty, the characters of longevity in Dunhuang suicide note had been the same as those of modern simplified characters.