Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - How to draw in a sweet camera

How to draw in a sweet camera

The method of drawing in sweet camera is as follows:

Step 1, click to open the "One Sweet Camera" software;

Step 2, after entering the shooting page, click the "retouching" function;

Step 3, click to open "Picture";

Step 4, find the "graffiti pen" function and draw on the picture.

Painting is the art of copying nature by hand on a two-dimensional plane. In medieval Europe, people often called painting "the art of monkeys".

Before the 20th century, the more realistic the painting, the higher the technology. But after entering the 20th century, with the appearance and development of photography technology, painting began to turn to the direction of expressing the painter's subjective self.

Painting is a form of capturing, recording and expressing different creative purposes, and the number of participants is also huge. The nature of painting can be natural, concrete (such as still life or landscape painting), photographic painting, abstract painting, narrative, symbol and emotion.

1. A plastic arts. Draw or write the image of things on paper, cloth, wall or other plane with colors and lines.

2. draw pictures. Tang Hanyu's "Entering the Writing Table": "Gan Kun's capacity, the light of the sun and the moon, knowing that it is impossible to draw, forced it to block the imperial edict."

Song Sushi's Gift of Strange Stones: "There are often beautiful stones on the Qi 'an River today, which are difficult to separate from jade. They are red, yellow and white, and their patterns are as smart and lovely as people pointing at snails. Although skilled people can't paint with their own intentions, what is the so-called strange stone? "

Qing Fu Cha Dunchong's "Yanjing New Year's Eve Lantern Festival": "All kinds of lights use yarn, silk, glass and bright corners to draw ancient and modern stories for pleasure."

Mr. Lu Xun's comic book essay: "Without paper the same size as the earth, the earth could not be drawn."

In Hu Yinglin's Preface to the Nine Flows of Shao's Mountain Residence in the Ming Dynasty, "Calligraphy, planning, archery and imperial art are the main arts, while games and painting are the auxiliary ones."

Lu Xun's letter to Li Hua: "As far as painting is concerned, it has been greatly influenced by Indian art since the Six Dynasties, and there is no Chinese painting."