How to write calligraphy well?

Calligraphy is written as follows:

Calligraphy depends on what style of font you write. Different fonts have different criteria for judging how the handwriting is. The most important thing is that you must feel comfortable looking at your own handwriting. If you are not satisfied with your own handwriting, then it is certainly difficult for others to really feel satisfied.

As far as my personal understanding of calligraphy is concerned, the criteria for judging fonts are quite different. For example, if you practice block letters, then your work should be clear and clear, and the structure must be as clear and specific as a work drawing, straight and organized, and it looks clear, clear and serious, showing rigor and rules.

If your font is running script, you must write your own artistic conception, and you must be able to do whatever you want, but you must not doodle at will without purpose; The judging standard of cursive script is even more erratic. The characteristics of cursive script are mainly personality and its own style, and there is no strong format framework requirement like block letters. You can refer to the crazy cursive font of a great man in this regard.

Its natural and unrestrained degree and its seemingly individual degree can be said to be a new expression form of cursive script. As for other font forms, I won't introduce them one by one. Calligraphy and writing are actually two different things. Although in the final analysis, I am still writing, but the purpose of calligraphy is to blend in with my mood, to be able to write out my emotions, to write out my characteristics and to write out my current state.

The function of writing is to express what you really mean, that is, to convey information through fonts. And writing well, its most basic requirement should be to feel pleasing to the eye. There are many writers in the world who provide a template for all kinds of fonts.

But this doesn't mean that we must be like everyone else when practicing writing, but we should write our own characteristics and write words that satisfy us. More often, as long as you feel satisfied, then the word is not ugly. If it's not good enough, you should practice your own aesthetics more than calligraphy.