Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - What kind of intangible arts and crafts did Tang Hua follow?

What kind of intangible arts and crafts did Tang Hua follow?

Tang Hua, an intangible cultural relic, is like a continuous painting.

Tang Hua is a traditional folk handicraft in China, which belongs to the national intangible cultural heritage. Tang Hua is a picture made of sugar, and it is also an edible picture. The production method is to cook brown sugar, white sugar and a little maltose in the oven until they can be painted, pour them on a flat slate for painting, and finally stick bamboo sticks while they are hot, so that you can see them and eat them.

Tang Hua's painting techniques are very similar to continuous strokes. If he moves slowly, sugar will solidify. It is also reasonable to draw beautiful Tang Hua with good skills and become a national intangible cultural heritage.

Tang Hua:

The most common "Tang Hua" is Tang Hua plane. In addition to plane painting, skilled artists will splice plane "parts" on marble slabs to create three-dimensional paintings with different styles, just like an unbearable ornament.

If you want to make a flower basket, first make a round sugar cake with syrup, and then pour a smaller circle. Using the difference between the cold and hot syrup twice, the bottom of the three-dimensional flower basket comes out. Adding beams and flowers, the whole flower basket is no longer a flat Tang Hua, but three-dimensional, vivid and colorful.

It is an authentic folk painting, a distinctive street art, widely spread between Bashan and Shushui, and it is a craft food loved by the people. In temple fairs and parks, Tang Hua's booths can be seen everywhere.