To practice calligraphy, you must learn the proper way to hold
the brush. This has much to do with the body's posture. You must
hold the brush properly and also learn how to use your wrist and
elbow while writing.
Body Posture
Your posture while you write depends on the size of the characters
you intend to write and your physical conditions. Proper posture
will affect the speed of your progress and also your health. A contemporary
calligrapher named Tang used the wrong posture, and though he became
a calligrapher, he became a hunchback as well. He is called Tang
the Hunchback.

Proper
posture for writing while seated.
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Proper
posture for writing while standing. |
What is the correct posture for writing? When sitting, the body
should be erect, the shoulders balanced and the back straight. The
legs should be apart, the feet evenly and firmly on the ground.
The paper is held down by the left hand. The right hand holds the
brush. The head is slightly forward, but be careful not to bow too
low. Fix your eyes on the spot where you intend to write. Your eyes
and the tip of your writing brush should be thirty centimeters apart.
Your whole body should feel natural; do not pay undue attention
to posture, or your body will become stiff or rigid. Correct posture
simply prevents deformity of your body and enables you to write
well. If you write characters larger than ten centimeters, you have
to stand up and write. You may use any appropriate posture, depending
on the situation.
Finger Method
The important thing about holding the brush is the rational way
of holding the five fingers and the coordinated use of these fingers.
The functions of the five fingers are called ye, ya, gou, ge and
di in Chinese.
Ye means to press down and refers to the use of the thumb. The
thumb should press the brush slantwise from inside to outside. Ya
refers to how the index finger holds the brush handle. Move the
finger slantwise and bend it slightly from outside to inside. The
index finger and the thumb coordinate, so that one presses and the
other holds the brush handle.

Holding the brush. |

Supported wrist method. |
Gou (hook) is the way the middle finger hooks the outside of the
brush. Move this finger forcefully from left to right to hook the
brush. The middle finger must coordinate well with the third finger
to write characters. Ge refers to the way the third finger press
the brush. The third finger is placed on the inside of the brush
handle pressing the handle from the inside to the outside. It coordinates
with the middle finger, so that the two fingers exert an even and
balanced force.
Di refers to the work of the little finger, which is placed under
the third finger to help it.
The important points in holding the brush are: The fingers must
exert substan tial force. The palm does no actual work. Xu Chengyi,
a calligrapher, recommends the following:
The tiger's mouth is like a crescent moon.
The palm is shaped like hiding an egg.
If the five fingers coordinate with each other,The movement of the
brush will be agile.
Method of Using The Wrist
Besides the fingers, one must use the wrist and elbow to write Chinese
characters. The wrist is crucial and must be used with agility.
You use the wrist to manipulate the tip of the brush. The four positions
of the wrist are: rest, cushion, lift and suspend.
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Rest the wrist of your right hand on the table. This will enable
you to use your fingers well. Employ this method when you are writing
very small characters-as small as the head of a fly, the Chinese
say.

Raised wrist method. |

Suspended wrist method. |
Cushion the wrist of your right hand. Usually you cushion it with
your left thumb or your left wrist. This lifts your right wrist.
This method is very often used for writing ordinary small characters.
Lift your right wrist from the table. Some people also call it
suspending the wrist. It is used to write medium-sized characters.
The last position is to suspend both the wrist and the elbow. Neither
touches the table. This method is used to write big characters.
These four wrist positions are only relative. If you intend to
raise your calligraphy to the level of art, you must practice the
suspended-wrist position from the very beginning. Would-be calligraphers
must not be afraid of difficulty. They must acquire this basic skill.
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