Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Illustration of three-fold paper-cut folding method

Illustration of three-fold paper-cut folding method

The diagram of the three-fold paper-cut folding method is as follows:

1. Draw a pair of scissors with curves and line segments on white paper. Scissors are cutting paper.

2. Then draw a parallelogram with lines, which is a blank sheet of paper.

3. Draw some irregular shapes with lines, which are small pieces cut by scissors.

4. When drawing a piece of paper, pay attention to the perspective relationship, and some of it is blocked.

5. Draw a windmill with arcs and lines. This is the finished origami.

6. Draw some folded paper with lines to enrich the picture, and the stick figure will be drawn.

10 folded flowers paper-cut pattern drawing:

1. Prepare a square piece of material paper, fold the material diagonally and fold it along the long side of the material.

2. Divide the middle plane into five parts, and the four parts are folded upwards; Fold again; Fold the rest back.

3. Now it's 50% off. Divide the material from the middle and fold it outwards, so that the 10 fold is completed.

Now draw a flower pattern. 10 fold drawing method.

5. Now cut off the part marked with diagonal lines. The cutting work is also completed.

6. Now put the materials in a 50% discount state. Cut off a corner diagonally with a five-pointed star in the middle.

7. Open the handmade flowers, and the beautiful 10 folded flowers will be finished.

Paper-cutting, also called paper engraving, is a hollow art and one of the oldest folk arts of Han nationality in China. Visually, it gives people an empty inspiration and artistic enjoyment.

The carrier of paper-cutting can be paper, gold and silver foil, bark, leaves, cloth and leather. The most representative Ping Jiang paper-cut in northern Shanxi Province has developed into a multi-color, multi-color and gorgeous pattern, forming a primary color and heavy color artistic language of "seeking complexity in simplicity, summing up complexity in complexity and seeking difference in harmony".