Using a thin gold body.
Calligraphy refers to the different forms and differences of traditional writing fonts and glyphs. Generally speaking, the writing forms of Chinese characters are divided into five major categories: seal script, official script, cursive script, running script, and regular script. Each major category can be subdivided. Thin gold style is a font created by Zhao Ji, Emperor Huizong of the Song Dynasty. It is a very unique calligraphy style in the history of calligraphy. Because it is very different from traditional calligraphy styles such as Jin Kaili and Tang Kai, it can be called a unique style in the history of calligraphy. Original. The thin gold font is agile and fast, and the handwriting is thin and strong, even thin without losing its flesh. The large characters are especially graceful and graceful. It is a font with a unique style. Xue Yao of the Tang Dynasty was the ancestor of the Thin Gold Calligraphy. Instead, he developed it and created something, which became a habit and became the last stream of Chu Shu. "Summer Tour to Shicong Poems and Preface" is Xue Yao's masterpiece and one of the inscriptions on the cliffs of Shicong River. The inscription on the cliff of Shi Cong River was inscribed on March 19, the first year of Jiushi in the Tang Dynasty. It is the largest cliff inscription in Henan Province. It is divided into two parts: "Preface to Shi Cong Poems on Summer Tour" and "Preface to Feast on Stone Cong in Autumn". The calligrapher of both is Xue Yao. His calligraphy is thin, vigorous and majestic, and he is called the "ancestor of thin gold style" by calligraphers of the past dynasties. Xue Yao's calligraphy was later learned by Emperor Huizong of the Song Dynasty, and he eventually created the unique "thin gold calligraphy" style.