Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - How to draw a handwritten newspaper on Double Ninth Festival?

How to draw a handwritten newspaper on Double Ninth Festival?

The calligraphy of the Double Ninth Festival is as follows:

1. Write the slogan "Double Ninth Festival" on it first, and draw a mountain on the left and right.

2. Then draw trees, cranes and pencil boxes in the picture.

3. Then color the drawn elements with corresponding colors. The slogan is painted yellow, the number of hills is painted green, the crane is painted black on a white background, the mouth is painted red, the border of the pencil case is painted green, and the inside is painted light yellow.

Finally, write the words in the writing box.

Introduction of Double Ninth Festival

Double Ninth Festival is a traditional folk festival in China, which falls on the ninth day of the ninth lunar month every year. The number of "Nine" is a positive number in the Book of Changes, and the two positive numbers of "Nine Nine" are heavy, so it is called "Chongyang"; It is also called "Double Ninth Festival", because both the date and the month conform to nine. Returning to the truth of 1999, the ancients thought that 1999 Chongyang was an auspicious day.

In the historical development and evolution, the Double Ninth Festival is a mixture of various folk customs, bearing rich cultural connotations. In the folk concept, "nine" is the largest number, which means longevity, and it places people's wishes for the health and longevity of the elderly. On May 20th, 2006, the Double Ninth Festival was included in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage.

The Double Ninth Festival is the best time to enjoy autumn, and some mountain villages in the south of China still retain the characteristics of "basking in autumn". "Sunbathing in autumn" is a typical agricultural custom phenomenon. In mountainous areas, villagers have to use the roofs in front of and behind their houses and their own windowsills to dry and hang crops, which has evolved into a traditional agricultural custom over time.

This special lifestyle and scene of villagers drying crops has gradually become the material pursued and created by painters and photographers, and created a poetic name "drying autumn".