The old man matches the match stick to create a match book.
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source: China News Network / > C12c3b40690aeb9e0cbd5811bd.jpg border="0">
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small book "Lanting Pavilion preface"
little match book "bad room inscription" Dou Yuewen take
new net Yancheng March (Dou Yuewen) a small Matches for ordinary people, ordinary can no longer be ordinary, and in the hands of Wu Yongkai, 90 years old, but it is a rare piece of art.
Wu Yongkai was obsessed with calligraphy at his childhood, especially in small letters. In 2008, he saw a collection of unearthed reports of ancient bamboo slips in the collection magazine, which inspired him to create his own match book. He made material with a match given by a hotel, and used the worn - out old style pen to write small letters on the cut paper, about 4 centimeters long and about 3 millimeters wide, and then put it on the match and became a small match. Match books do not need special writing tools, and only use ordinary pens. At first he tried to write directly on a match stick with a pen, but he found that the written word would turn open, and he thought of writing on the paper first and then sticking it on. Because of its small font size, the hands must be steady and steady when writing. Eyes should be fixed and focused on paper. As long as the hands tremble, a word may become an ink spot, and the writing fails, and the work is useless.
Wu Yongkai's home has a series of matches written in the Lanting Pavilion preface, and more than thirty matches are arranged neatly. Zang Kurt, President of the city salt painting and Calligraphy Academy, wrote a poem for him. In the years of Mo Hai, I wrote more articles. Wu Yongkai said he also tried to mount a match for the match, first putting matches on a plate, in a carton, and using a variety of colors of paper or silk to make a background. It was a fine piece of art. Wu Yongkai says he writes and mounts himself. He enjoys this process.
according to Wu Yongkai, the first practice of writing the Tang poetry was the first practice of writing the Tang poetry. Later, he wrote the Song Ci and the new words of the times. Now more than 50 pieces of match micro books have been written. Many of them are stored in the city's "crane home Gallery" exhibition. If possible, he hopes to donate these works to public welfare organizations. Wu said that considering that matches were not easy to carry as a flammable material, he was studying the development of "match book" into "miniature wooden slips". As long as the body is allowed, he will continue to write.