Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - How to draw a foreign old-fashioned house

How to draw a foreign old-fashioned house

The steps to draw an old-fashioned house in a foreign country are as follows:

1. Draw a wavy line.

2. Draw the bottom of the house.

3, add the roof.

4, draw the front door and steps.

5. Add the horizontal lines and windows.

6, Draw more windows, chimneys.

7, Erase lines and add curves to the roof.

8. Draw snow on the roof.

9.Paint colors to finish the painting.

Types of Old Foreign Houses

1. Wigwam - North America

A wigwam is a conical hut with a smoke hole, usually built by Native Americans. The frame is made of a curved, thin tree trunk covered with bark, skin, or pieces of cloth. These dwellings were not designed to be relocated, but could be easily assembled and then built in a new location if necessary.

2. Palloza - Spain

The Palloza is a traditional home in Galicia (northwestern Iberian Peninsula). The wooden frame is surrounded by stone walls laid to leave openings for doors and small windows. The whole thing is then covered by a conical thatched roof. Until the 1970s, the palosa was used as housing in Galicia.

3. Kurin' - Ukraine

Kurin' (from the Ukrainian word for "smoke") was the home of the Cossacks on the lower reaches of the Dnieper and Don rivers. The first Cossack settlements appeared on the floodplains (river reeds) in the sixteenth century. The walls of these mostly temporary houses were made of earthen mounds filled with mud and clay. The roofs were tiled with reeds and, of course, there had to be a hole for smoke. Many of the features of these first Cossack dwellings can be seen in more modern huts across Eastern Europe.