How to write the word "year" in calligraphy regular script

The writing method of the character Nian is as follows:

The character Nian is a character with a single structure. The upper part of the character is compact and the entire center of gravity is on it. Several horizontal strokes are also parallel to each other.

The left-hand stroke should be short, from thick to thin, the top should be square, and the left-hand stroke should be vertical. The horizontal stroke can be started at the left-hand end point, or in the middle of the left-hand stroke, from thin to thick. Lift the pen at the top right, and start the horizontal pen in the middle at the bottom left of the left-handed person. This horizontal pen is slightly longer than the one above. The small vertical pen on the left can also be written as a dot in calligraphy. It is located between the two horizontal pens. room, cannot go out.

The last horizontal pen must be long, and when it passes the central axis and is pressed downward, it must have an arc. This horizontal stroke plays the role of holding up the entire character. Finally, there is a vertical stroke. This vertical stroke must be solid and powerful, straight, and vertical with a hanging needle. This vertical stroke runs through three horizontal strokes. The starting stroke can be in the middle of the first horizontal stroke, or it can be a little to the right. The horizontal strokes of this character should be written more compactly, dense but not sparse.

Brush calligraphy refers to characters written according to traditional rules, rather than words written randomly with a brush. Calligraphy is the art of line modeling. The so-called brush technique mainly refers to how to use the brush to create ideal lines.

As a writing tool, the writing brush has a very long history. Traces of writing brushes can be found on the painted pottery as early as the Neolithic Age. Although no actual writing brush has been seen before the Western Zhou Dynasty, some signs of the use of writing brushes can be found in prehistoric painted pottery patterns and oracle bone inscriptions from the Shang Dynasty. In the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, brushes were widely used to write on bamboo slips and silk.