Longitudinal movement mainly includes the following types:
Put pen to paper: the initial contact between pen and paper is called put pen to paper, also called starting pen. Writing is generally light, like a bird falling from the air on a branch. Putting pen to paper is the beginning of writing.
Pen pause: Press the pen to call pen pause. Don't overdo it. If it is too heavy, it will be too fat to draw.
Pen lifting: lifting the pen to the top is called pen lifting. Generally, when you finish writing, you should start writing. Hold up a pen like a bird about to fly high from the ground.
Lateral movement mainly includes the following types:
Row: Row from one end to the other is called row, and row is also called row and over-row.
Writing: after stopping writing, lift the pen slightly and apply force in the opposite direction to make the nib perpendicular to the paper.
Folding pen: when writing some pictures, you want to go down first, then up, then left and then right, change direction flatly and lightly, and deliberately expose the edges and corners. This kind of pen is called folding pen. For example, to write horizontally, first put the pen on the upper left, and then fold it to the lower right to write a square edge. This is a folding pen.
Rotating pen: the rotation of the nib is called rotating pen. The purpose of turning the pen is to write pointillism without edges and corners, such as "vertical bending", so you should turn the pen tip like a compass to draw a circle.
Pen return: the direction of pen return after stopping is called pen return. The purpose of returning the pen is to "protect the tail and avoid' broken wood'".
Stroke: A stroke is called a stroke when it is reversed. Unlike reverse strokes, reverse strokes are reverse strokes. If you write a left vertical hook, when you write the length of the hook vertically, lift the pen to the left, and then, in turn, make the nib face the opposite direction of the hook to be picked out-this is the pen-and finally lift the pen to pick it out.
Vertical pen: when walking, the pen tip is raised, and if you go far and don't look back, it is called vertical pen. For example, when writing off, use a pen from heavy to light, and finally use a vertical pen.
In addition to vertical movement and horizontal movement, there is also a way to raise the pen between them. This kind of brushwork neither raises the pen nor stops, that is, it does not turn or move, and the pen stops on the paper, which is called vertical pen. The purpose of keeping a pen is to gain motivation, that is, to obtain a certain situation of stippling. The above are several commonly used strategies. Beginners will gradually master more brushwork as long as they ponder carefully in writing practice.