Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - How to draw a sparrow in Chinese painting?

How to draw a sparrow in Chinese painting?

How to draw pictures of sparrows in Chinese painting is as follows:

1. Draw an arc with neutral strokes, as shown in the figure.

2. Use neutral strokes to draw the sparrow's mouth, as shown in the figure.

3. Draw the sparrow's eyes with neutral strokes, as shown in the figure.

4. Draw the lines of the sparrow's abdomen with neutral strokes, and draw a curve at the eye part and under the eye at the same time, as shown in the figure.

5. Draw the sparrow's wings with neutral strokes, as shown in the figure.

6. Draw the sparrow's tail with neutral strokes, as shown in the figure.

7. Draw the sparrow's feet with neutral strokes, as shown in the figure.

8. Paint the sparrow with your favorite color with a watercolor pen, as shown in the figure.

Passerby: It is the general name of 27 kinds of birds, such as sparrows. They are similar in size and color. Generally, the upper body is brown and black, so it is commonly known as sparrow. There are 9 primary flight feathers, and the light feather edge of the outer flight feather (except the first one) is slightly enlarged at the base and proximal end of the feather and slightly crosses into two transverse spots, which is especially obvious in flight. The mouth is short, thick and strong, conical, and the top is slightly curved. Except tree finches, both sexes are different colors.

There are 27 species in the world, 5 of which are distributed in China. It is quite widely distributed. Except the extremely cold polar regions and alpine deserts, they are distributed all over the world.

Sparrows are widely distributed all over the world except in extremely cold polar regions and alpine deserts. The most typical biological vocabulary to describe sparrows is sparrows.

Sparrows are native birds in Europe. According to the research of ornithologists in the early 20th century, sparrows are widely distributed in every corner of the European continent except Italy. Among European countries, Germany started to control sparrows earlier, but the number of sparrows in Germany actually increased gradually in the18th century.

From the beginning of18th century to the beginning of19th century, sparrows concentrated in German grain-producing areas, which became a serious economic problem. The authorities tried to control the number of sparrows by collecting poll tax, that is, every citizen had to deliver a certain number of sparrows every year, count them and burn them.