New Year's Day Gala Poster Pictures are as follows:
1, with the form of wavy lines to draw the outline of the four sides of the border, and then in the image of 1/3 of the position of the "New Year's Day" newspaper header text, to the text of the lantern-shaped border.
2, in the right side of the picture painted "2022", and with a border; the bottom of the picture painted on the Yuanbao, firecrackers, love and other decorations.
3. Use a ruler to draw a text column in the blank space of the picture.
4, the four sides of the background, love hearts painted red; text, scroll painted yellow, the background of the lanterns painted red; firecrackers painted red and yellow; Yuanbao painted yellow, in the right part of the brown as the shadow of the Yuanbao.
5, in the text box around the orange tracing, and then in the outermost circle of dotted lines, a simple New Year's Day handbook is complete!
Origin of New Year's Day
In the calendar, it is customary to say that the Earth orbits the sun for one week as one year. However, since the Earth's orbit around the sun does not have a fixed starting point and ending point, the starting point and ending point of a year are artificially defined, which has resulted in the inconsistency of various calendars. According to legend, the term Yuan and comes from one of the earliest emperors of China, Ying Xiang, who stipulated that the first month of the lunar calendar should be the first year and the first day of the lunar month should be the first day of the year.
Some dynasties later changed the date of Yuan and, but in principle, it was still the first day of the year as New Year's Day, such as the Xia Dynasty with the first day of the first month as New Year's Day, but the Shang Dynasty with the first day of the 12th month as New Year's Day, while the Zhou Dynasty with the first day of the 11th month as New Year's Day, and the Qin Dynasty with the first day of the 10th month as New Year's Day. Until the Western Han Dynasty, when Emperor Wu, the great historian Sima Qian and others to re-establish the calendar, and stipulate that the first day of the first month of each year for the New Year's Day, and from then on through the generations did not change.
After the success of the 1911 Xinhai Revolution, it was decided to adopt the internationally recognized Gregorian calendar, so the lunar New Year's Day was changed to the Spring Festival, and January 1 of the Gregorian calendar was called New Year's Day. At the time of the founding of New China, it began to officially use the A.D. dating system, and designated January 1 of each year as New Year's Day on the Gregorian calendar.