Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - How to draw a clear kite?

How to draw a clear kite?

The painting method of Qingming kite is as follows:

1, first draw a semicircle, draw wings on both sides, and the first half of the kite will be drawn.

2. Then draw the tail of the kite, draw the eyes and mouth on his head, and draw a spool in the lower right corner of the kite.

3. We connect the spool with the kite, and finally color the kite and spool.

Qingming Festival

1, also known as outing festival, outing festival, March festival, ancestor worship festival, etc. This festival is at the turn of mid-spring and late spring. Tomb-Sweeping Day is the biggest ancestor worship festival of the Chinese nation, which originated from ancestors' beliefs and customs of worshipping spring.

2. Tomb-Sweeping Day has both natural and humanistic connotations. It is both a natural solar term and a traditional festival. Grave-sweeping and outing are two major etiquette themes in Tomb-Sweeping Day. These two traditional etiquette themes have been handed down in China since ancient times.

3. Tomb-Sweeping Day is a traditional major Spring Festival. It is a fine tradition of the Chinese nation since ancient times to sweep graves and remember our ancestors. It is not only conducive to promoting filial piety, awakening family memories, but also conducive to promoting the cohesion and identity of family members and even the nation.

4. Tomb-Sweeping Day's integration of natural solar terms and humanistic customs is the unity of time, place and human harmony, which fully embodies the idea that the ancestors of the Chinese nation pursued the harmony of "heaven, place and people" and paid attention to the harmony of time, place and people.

Tomb-Sweeping Day, Spring Festival, Dragon Boat Festival and Mid-Autumn Festival are also called the four traditional festivals in China. Besides China, some countries and regions in the world also have Tomb-Sweeping Day, such as Viet Nam, South Korea, Malaysia and Singapore. On May 20th, 2006, with the approval of the State Council, Tomb-Sweeping Day announced by People's Republic of China (PRC) and the Ministry of Culture was included in the first batch of national intangible cultural heritage list.