Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - How to draw Hanbok women's clothing

How to draw Hanbok women's clothing

Girls hanbok drawing method is as follows:

1, draw the outline line: we first use the pencil to draw a large outline proportion, the first whole after the local practice, and then use the outlining pen to outline the lines.

2, drawing Hanbok: Hanbok has a lot of lines, need to have more patience, drawing this thing seems to have no shortcuts, more practice every day, will be able to draw well.

3, paint colors: paint colors, you can use markers, but beginners may not be easy to grasp, you can also use watercolors or colored pencils.

The full name of the Han Chinese dress is "Han Chinese traditional dress", also known as Han clothes, Chinese clothes, Han clothes, is from the period of the Yellow Emperor to the end of the Ming Dynasty and the early Qing Dynasty period, the Han Chinese ceremonial culture as the connotation of the development of national dress.

It is the embodiment of China's "country of clothing", "state of etiquette" and "embroidered China", carrying the outstanding craftsmanship and aesthetics of Han dyeing, weaving and embroidery, and inheriting more than 30 It has inherited more than 30 Chinese intangible cultural heritages and protected Chinese arts and crafts.

The Hanbok is made of cloth and silk with a width of two feet and two inches (about 50cm) and is divided into ten parts: collar, lapel, obeisance, dickey, train, sleeves, sleeves, sleeves, belt, and kneepad. Two pieces of cloth of equal length are folded in half to form the front lapel and the back train, and sewn together to form the center seam of the back. The front placket without obeisance is a straight-necked bodice. If you take another piece of cloth, cut it into two overlapping pieces, and sew them on the left and right lapels, then it is a slanting-collar right-overlapping garment.

The center seam of the front lapel and the back train is called the grub, i.e., the dukkha and ren vein, and the obeisance is on the right side of the ren vein, so it is called right-over-obeisance. The length of the train is divided into the middle of the waist, above the knee and above the foot. According to the length of the train, there are three lengths of Hanfu: 襦, caftan, and deep coat. The seam between the sleeve and the train is called the gusset, and the cuffs are called the cuffs. A complete Hanbok usually has three layers: a small coat (underwear), a medium coat, and a large coat.