How to write the seal script font?

The seal script writing method is as follows:

The interpretation is:

〈motion〉

(Understanding. Like a cockroach passing through. . The branches and stems will grow. Original meaning: to come out, to give birth to, to grow)

Same as the original meaning

Indicates people or things, equivalent to "this" "That"

A name that refers to a person or thing, equivalent to him, her, it, they

〈help〉

's

< p>Used between the attributive and the central word to express the ownership relationship or general modification relationship

〈Form〉

Has the shape of the letter S, "Zigzag" shape.

Seal script, one of the ancient calligraphy styles of Chinese characters, is also called seal script. It is a general term for ancient writing. "The seal script is passed down, its physics is transmitted, and its application is endless." The ancients believed that the seal script was created by Cangjie, but this is actually untrustworthy. The emergence of a kind of writing requires a long process of brewing and development, and it is impossible for one person to complete it in a short period of time. The broad seal script includes all calligraphy styles before the official script and its extensions, such as bronze inscriptions, stone drum inscriptions, ancient script of the Six Kingdoms, small seal script, Miao seal script, overlapping seal script, etc. In the narrow sense, it mainly refers to "big seal script" and "small seal script". The characters in the seal script are drawn in circles, and the structure follows the meaning of the six books. Therefore, Sun Guoting of the Tang Dynasty said: "The seal script is graceful and clear."

Li Si, the originator of Xiaozhuan, had the courtesy name Tonggu and was a native of Shangcai (now Shangcai County, Henan) during the Warring States Period. Later, he became the Prime Minister of Qin and organized and formulated Xiaozhuan, the standard calligraphy style of Qin Dynasty. The "Yishan Stele" existing in the Forest of Steles in Xi'an was copied from the Song Dynasty. Many of the carved stones on which the books were written have been destroyed. There are only two original stones in existence.

Seal script calligraphy declined after the Wei and Jin Dynasties, and was represented by Li Yangbing in the Tang Dynasty. Seal script calligraphy ushered in its second creative peak in the Qing Dynasty, and a large number of calligraphers who were good at seal script appeared, such as Wang Shu, Qian Zhan, Deng Shiru, Wu Rangzhi, Zhao Zhiqian, Wu Changshuo, etc. After the founding of the People's Republic of China, representative figures of seal script include Wang Fu'an, Han Tianheng, Wang Youyi, Sha Menghai, Huang Binhong, Liu Jiang, Lai Chusheng, Deng Sanmu, Zhang Xin, Lu Weizhao, Ni Hejun, Shang Chengzuo, Xu Wuwen, etc.