Step 1: First draw a diagonal line in green to outline the shape of the vine, as shown below.
Step 2, then continue to extend the line outline of the vine from the previous step, as shown in the figure below.
Step 3: Then fill in the outline of the vine you just drew with a green marker, and then gently draw a winding branch around the vine, as shown below.
Step four. Finally, continue to gently draw lush branches around the vines with a green brush. Branches can be drawn in different sizes. Here, the vines are drawn with simple strokes, as shown in the figure below.
Data expansion:
A vine (téng wàn) is a flexible or soft woody or herbaceous climbing plant rooted in the soil. Stems are slender, unable to stand upright, and have the climbing habit of attaching to other things and extending upward by virtue of their own functions or special structures; When there is nothing else to cling to, it grows by crawling or hanging.
Vines are often called climbing plants. The same point of this plant is that the stems are slender and cannot stand upright, but they all have the climbing habit of climbing and extending upward by their own actions or special structures.
There are many different kinds of vines, and their climbing methods are also different: winding vines need objects for them to wind. Newborn branches will entangle the scaffold during growth. Strong columns and vines can serve as good support. Examples of such vines include kiwi fruit, bougainvillea, Celastrus americana, morning glory, honeysuckle, Celastrus americana and black eye. All these vines will grow rapidly in one season.