Lesson 3 focus on detail of strokes.
General principles and comments on the fine details in writing
each type of stroke: When the stroke turns or changes, we do
so slowly.
When we need to turn sharply, we slow
down even more. Just like driving.
ex1. Moon character, ending hook: This
is a sharp turn, so we slow down as we finish the downstroke, with a
little bit of repeated dabbing at the end of the down stroke, then we
raise the pen to make the hook by starting a little higher than the
lowest part of the downstroke.
ex2. Vertical downstroke with sharp
point: after 2/3 of the downstroke, we slow down, and slowly lifeup.
This can be seen as a series of 4-5 repeated (mostly overlapping)
short downstrokes, each time lifing up a little bit, and progressing
a little further down.
ex3. Right “La4” stroke of the
character “Eight”: As we move toward the major turning point, we
push down on the brush, and then slow down for the major turn, and
then slowly lift up. The key thing here is slow, to give the weight
of the turning part. Make sure the ending stroke is mostly
horizontal, to give balance to the character.
ex4. Moon character. At the first
turn (horizontal then turning to vertical downstroke: Make sure the
verticle stroke starts not too high from the horizontal ending, to
make the two strokes seem continuous. My verticle strokes started
separately and way too high. Just start the vertical part right
where the horizontal ends, by pressing down right there. The weight
of the pen will create the extruding starting point slightly above
the horizonal end naturally.
Principle on character balance, and the
combination of different strokes:
Each character needs to display balance
and proportion. Draw imaginary lines around your character to see if
it is architecturally stable and graceful.
ex1. The left “pie3” stroke of
“Moon”: don't turn too early, or too curved. Stay straight most
of the way down, turning only near the end, so that it is not a
trapezoid, but nearly a rectangle. Turning part should be slow.
e2. character for “Three”: equal
thickness for uniformity. For proportion, make sure that if the
character is big, the thickness of the strokes should be increased
accordingly. The character should fill up the space of the imaginary
boundary without excessive interior space.
Principles on ink:
The ink intensity can be varied, and we
can experiment with different levels of blackness.
When we add excessive water to the ink
(i.e. when the ink dries, and we add a few drops), it will be too
diluted, causing the paper to warp. Don't add more than a drop of
water each time. Adding water makes it difficult to know when the
ink becomes uniform again.
If we add water, we should use
ink-stone several rounds, to make sure that the ink has reach
consistency again. Incidentally, ink-stone ink is natural, as
opposed to the chemicals in bottled ink. It has better fragrance due
to natural material.
My parents would use fine wine for
ink-stone ink, since the fragrance is even better. Of course, the
alcohol will evaporate much quicker, causing the ink to dry out fast.
So we should use a cover on the ink when we are not writing. The
quick drying properties of the alcohol makes it good for the written
characters, since the paper would not warp as much due to the quick
drying.
After we soak the brush, we should
squeeze the water out, and hang the pen vertically to let it dry.
Final notes on strokes:
e1. horizontal: The starting point is
like the motion of the letter L: rather than a slanted 45-deg initial
pressing down, it is an almost 90-deg pressing down, only slightly to
the right.
e2. Ending horizontal stroke: At the
end, almost a clockwise circle motion rather than triangle, to round
out the end of the stroke.
e3. vertical stroke with proper ending:
counter-clockwise cirlcle
Recommendation:
experiment with different variations
and parameters in how we start or end the strokes. Different masters
create their style based exactly on how they decide on these
variations. Everyone has a different natural style, and it is worth
exploring our own. Class administration: time management
We have spent most of the lesson
reviewing and discussing each person's HW, and that is wonderful at
the early stage when each of our strokes need correction.
However, in light of the limited time
that we meet, I would recommend the following time-management ideas,
so as to prioritize what we do in class:
We should spend at most 15 mins in the
beginning of the class for HW discussion.
Then we move to the teacher's scheduled
lesson and demonstration.
If we want more time for HW discussion,
we should do so after the main part of the lesson.
To spend the initial 15 mins equally,
we can use a 3-minute Egg-timer for each person's HW.
Hence, to maximize the value of those
minutes spent on discussing your HW, I would suggest that we present
only a few sheets that we want to discuss, starting with those
characters that we have the most pressing questions. This means that
we should take notes (with a fine point pen) alongside our
characters, and perhaps to grade ourselves by indicating which
character is good and which is bad, so as to save time, and to remind
ourselves of our questions.
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