There are now six styles of brush calligraphy, namely, running script, cursive script, official script, seal script, regular script and horse script.
The quality of calligraphy works is mainly judged by the lines, fluency and integrity of fonts. China is the birthplace of calligraphy culture and art, and also the first country to use brush. There are many calligraphers of brush writing in China, including Wang Xizhi, Yan Zhenqing, Huai Su, Su Dongpo, Huang Tingjian, Mi Fei and Liu Gongquan, as well as modern Sha Menghai, Qigong and Liu Huipu (alive). These literati are all highly skilled calligraphers. The art of writing brush calligraphy needs to be carried forward by the next generation and needs our efforts.
China's calligraphy is a unique traditional art in China, which is mainly divided into "soft pen calligraphy" and "hard pen calligraphy". Throughout the ages, Chinese characters in China have been created by working people, and pictures have been used to record them. After thousands of years of development, it has evolved into today's writing. Because our ancestors invented the brush, calligraphy came into being. Throughout the ages, Chinese characters were mainly written with a brush. As for other writing forms, such as hard pen and finger book, their writing rules are not completely different from those of brush, but they are basically the same. Based on tracing the source (after Oracle bone inscriptions), this paper focuses on the law of writing Chinese characters with a brush. As long as we have a "narrow" understanding of calligraphy, it will be of great benefit to understand "broad" calligraphy.
Common strokes are: horizontal (short horizontal, sharp left horizontal, sharp right horizontal, etc. ), vertical skimming (hanging needle vertical skimming, hanging vertical skimming), skimming (flat skimming, oblique skimming, vertical skimming, etc. ), pressure (oblique pressure, flat pressure), point lifting (vertical lifting belongs to combined strokes).
I hope it can help you solve the problem.