1. Draw the border of the poster on paper and add appropriate elements at the bottom and top.
2. Drawing text module, in which the shapes of two lanterns are drawn.
3. Draw a circle in the middle.
Draw the outline of Happy New Year's Day above the circle.
5. Draw some flower elements for the presentation, and it is finished.
New Year's Day is a traditional festival in China. The element is called the beginning, and the beginning of each number is called the element. Dan said "God". New Year's Day means "the first day". It was first seen in the Book of Jin: "Judy takes the first month as the yuan, but it is actually the spring of New Year's Day." That is, the first month is Yuan and the first day is Dan.
New Year's Day refers to different times. In the Xia Dynasty, the first month of the summer calendar was January in spring. In Shang dynasty, December in winter was the first month of lunar calendar, and November in winter was the first month of weekly calendar. In the Qin Dynasty, October in winter was the first month, and the first day of October was New Year's Day. During the period of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty, January in spring was the first month, and the first day of January was called New Year's Day, which was used until the end of Qing Dynasty.
Extended data:
Yuan means "start", and the beginning of each 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, such as "the first day of the first month" in the lunar calendar and "65438+ 1 denier" in the solar calendar. In the history of China, "the first day of the first month" has many titles, such as New Year's Day, Yuanri, Jacky, Chen Yuan, Shangri-La and Yuanshuo. But among many appellations, "Chinese New Year" is the most common and the longest.
New Year's Day in modern China was listed as a legal holiday by the China government and became a national holiday. After a day's rest, we often adjust the weekend before or after that day, and usually have a three-day rest. In modern China, the celebration of New Year's Day is far less important than the Spring Festival. General organs and enterprises will hold year-end collective celebrations, and there are few folk activities.