The painting method of handwritten newspaper on New Year's Day is as follows:
1. First, draw a little girl bowing at the bottom of the picture, draw large and small gold ingots and red envelopes on her axis, and draw wavy lines on the left and right sides.
2. Draw a downward arc on the top, draw two circles in the middle, write the words "New Year's Day" inside, then draw short lines for decoration, and draw rabbits with carrots and bears with five-pointed stars on the left and right sides respectively.
3. Draw a text box made of saplings on the left, next to a cute rabbit head, draw a panda-style text box on the right, and draw a rabbit with carrots in the middle.
4. Let's color together. The characters' hair is painted brown, the clothes are painted red, the gold ingots are painted yellow, the red envelopes are painted yellow and red, and the wavy lines are painted blue.
5. The upper background is pink and blue, the circle is painted red, the characters are painted blue and yellow, the rabbits are painted pink, the carrots are painted orange, the bears are painted brown, the stars are painted yellow, and the flags below are painted red.
6. Paint blue, red, green and other elements on the background below, green on the saplings, black on the eyes and ears of the panda text frame, goose yellow on the rabbit below, and finally draw a grid line to finish the handwritten newspaper on New Year's Day in the Year of the Rabbit.
New Year's Day, that is, January 1st of the Gregorian calendar, is commonly known as "New Year" in most countries in the world. Yuan means "beginning", and the beginning of every number is called "yuan"; Dan means "day"; "New Year's Day" means "the first day". "New Year's Day" usually refers to the first day of the first month in the calendar.
Yuan means "beginning", and the beginning of every number is called "Yuan"; Dan means "day"; "New Year's Day" means "the first day". The term "New Year's Day" usually refers to the first day of the first month in the calendar. The calendar stipulates when January is (that is, the first month), and New Year's Day is on the first day of that month, such as the first day of the first month in the lunar calendar and the first day of January in the solar calendar.
In the history of China, "the first day of the first month" has many appellations, such as New Year's Day, Yuanri, Yuanzheng, Yuanchen, Yuanchun, Shangri, Yuanshuo, etc., but among many appellations, "New Year's Day" is the most common and the longest. Yuan has the meaning of beginning, "Dan" means tomorrow, and has the meaning of saying goodbye to the old and welcoming the new.