How to write the format of calligraphy paper

Calligraphy paper formats include: Doufang, Sankai, nave, banners and couplets.

First, the bucket side:

Dou Fang is a square work written vertically, which is a style of China's calligraphy and painting. Usually, four-foot rice paper is cut into two pieces, two feet high and two feet wide, which are square. You can also cut the four-foot rice paper into eight pieces (about 1 foot square), which is called "sketching the square" or "doodling the square sketch".

Writing content is generally four to six lines. Because of the large number of rows and columns, we should pay great attention to the size, opening and ending, echo and rhythm change in chapter planning.

Two, three open:

Rectangular, with different sizes, is a style of China's painting and calligraphy. If you cut four feet of rice paper into three parts, it is called four feet and three cuts. If you cut five feet of rice paper into three parts, it is called five feet and three cuts. And so on.

It's also three-split, and the size is different. Four-by-three is usually a three-foot map (actually two feet seven inches, one-third of eight squares). Five feet and three openings are one third of twelve square feet, and the area of each opening is four feet.

Third, the nave:

Nave is a rectangular work written vertically. The size is generally a whole piece of rice paper (divided into four feet, five feet, six feet, eight feet and so on. , in which nave is 68CM*45CM).

Because the scale is relatively large, it requires the creator to have skilled techniques and grasp the power of work planning. When creating, we should pay attention to the primary and secondary relationship between annotations and inscriptions, so that the primary and secondary are different and glow accordingly.

Fourth, banners:

Banners are long works written vertically, and the size is generally a whole piece of rice paper. When controlling the composition, we should carefully conceive and innovate according to the characteristics of the book.

Five, couplet:

Two opposite banners, written in couplets, are also called antithetical couplets. Couplets are divided into upper couplet and lower couplet, with the upper couplet on the right and the lower couplet on the right.

The upper and lower couplets can be the same size as the banners, and they can also be larger or smaller than the banners. The writing content of couplets is very strict, which can only be antithetical sentences (the upper and lower couplets are equal in words, flat and even, and the general words do not disappear repeatedly), and the rhyme includes antithetical sentences (commonly known as pairs) and two couplets at both ends (tied couplets and necklaces).

The antithesis has five words and seven words, ranging from three words to dozens of crosses and hundreds of words. Rhyme is divided into five words and seven words. When five-character and seven-character couplets dominate the composition, they should be written vertically in the middle of a single line. Write two or more lines in the dialogue above the cross (pay attention to the writing order, the upper part is from right to left and the lower part is from left to right).