Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - How to draw a kite?

How to draw a kite?

The picture of flying a kite is as follows:

1, let's draw a little boy's face and hairstyle first, then the five senses, and then the hat on his head.

2. Pull down your body and arms and hold a line with both hands.

3. Then draw pants and legs, and then draw a diamond as a kite and its tail.

Colour the boy's hair black and his hat blue.

5, the face and body are painted with flesh color, and the hair is painted with purple.

6. Then paint the pants light green, the shoes brown, the soles black, the socks orange and the mouth red.

7. Finally, paint the kite gold and the tail light green.

fly a kite

1, one of the traditional folk games, is a holiday custom in Tomb-Sweeping Day. Kites are also called organ, paper kite, kite and paper kite. Originated in China, it is a communication tool invented by ancient working people. Lu Ban made his first kite out of bamboo. Later, only the palace had paper kites. In Minnan, it is called wind blowing. Kite is a product that is heavier than air and can float in the air with the help of wind.

2. In the late Tang Dynasty, people added bamboo flutes to paper kites. Kites fly into the sky and are blown by the wind, making a "whoop" sound, like the sound of playing kites. So people changed the name of "paper kite" to "kite". In modern times, kites and organs are collectively called, including paper kites without whistles. Weifang is known as the kite capital.

Kites originated in China, and kites in China have a long history. It is said that it originated in the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, and it has been more than two thousand years. According to legend, Mo Zhai made wooden birds out of wood, which took three years to develop, and was the earliest origin of human kites. Later, Lu Ban used bamboo to improve kite materials in Mo Zhai. It was not until Cai Lun improved papermaking in the Eastern Han Dynasty that kites were made of paper, so they were called "paper kites".