tdelewis
Elite Cafe Member
Just a suggestion that may be helpful to beginners. Drawing scrolls, like most artwork is a fine motor skill that requires that the hand and brain work together much like handwriting. Having taught penmanship and some calligraphy to younger students and watch them try very hard in a very unrelaxed way. They take a death grip on the pen and move it in short steps with too much pressure. These are difficult habits to brake. Think back to when you were first taught cursive writing. It was taught using a smooth motion tracing or repeating the same motion over and over, writing a whole line of the same letter. This was to condition the hand and brain to work together.
If you are beginner at drawing scrolls you should approach much the same way. My suggestion is to do a Google image search for a golden mean scroll. Print out a copy of one that covers 2 inches or so and trace it over and over. Get the hand and brain to work together. Don't expect to get perfect results even with much practice. I don't get a good scroll on my first attempts but I can go back and correct what needs corrected.
100 years ago penmanship was taught at the college level. Imagine having some accountant keeping their records in pen and ink as they once did. I cringe at the handwriting of our young people today. A handwritten thank you or note is much more meaningful than a test message. Handwriting is coming to a slow death. Just a thought.
If you are beginner at drawing scrolls you should approach much the same way. My suggestion is to do a Google image search for a golden mean scroll. Print out a copy of one that covers 2 inches or so and trace it over and over. Get the hand and brain to work together. Don't expect to get perfect results even with much practice. I don't get a good scroll on my first attempts but I can go back and correct what needs corrected.
100 years ago penmanship was taught at the college level. Imagine having some accountant keeping their records in pen and ink as they once did. I cringe at the handwriting of our young people today. A handwritten thank you or note is much more meaningful than a test message. Handwriting is coming to a slow death. Just a thought.