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in Chinese / Japanese...

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Personalize your custom “月” project by clicking the button next to your favorite “月” title below...


  1. Moon

  2. April

  3. August

  4. Bamboo Moon

  5. February

  6. January

  7. July

  8. June

  9. Kagetsu

10. Month of March

11. The Month of May

12. Moonlight

13. New Moon

14. October

15. September

16. December

17. November

18. Samidare

19. Sun Moon Stars

20. Tsuki no Kokoro / Mind like the Moon

21. Beauty of Nature

22. Flower in the Mirror, Moon on Water

23. The Sun, Moon, and Stars

24. Time Waits For No One

25. Mountain Travels Poem by Dumu


 yuè
 tsuki
 
Moon Scroll

月 is how to write the title for “moon” in Chinese, Korean Hanja, and Japanese Kanji.

月 is also used to refer to the month. This is because China traditionally uses a lunar calendar, so saying “next moon” is the same as saying “next month” etc.
In modern Chinese and Japanese and old Korean, the character for a number is put in front of this moon character to represent western months. So “one moon” is January “two moons” is February etc.

If you are wondering, in the east Asian way to write dates, the character for “sun” or “day” is used with a number in front of it to express the day of the month. So “ten moons, one sun” becomes “October 1st” or “10/1” (this date happens to be Chinese National Day - The equivalent of Independence Day in the USA, Canada Day, or the Queen's Birthday).

In Japanese, 月 can be a surname that romanizes as Tsuki, Tsukizaki, or Takagetsu.

April

Fourth Month

 sì yuè
 shi gatsu
April Scroll

This is April in Chinese, Japanese Kanji, and old Korean Hanja.

This was originally the fourth month of the Chinese lunar year, now used for the fourth month of the Gregorian calendar (also known as the Western or Christian calendar). 四月 literally mean “fourth month” or “fourth moon.”

August

Eighth Month

 bā yuè
 hachigatsu / yatsuki
August Scroll

八月 is the month of August in Chinese, Japanese Kanji, and old Korean Hanja.

八月 literally means “eighth month” or “eighth moon.”

In Japanese, this can also be the female given name, Yatsuki, in much the same way August can be a female given name in English.

 yuè zhú
 tsuki take
Bamboo Moon Scroll

月竹 is the title, “Bamboo Moon” - Technically, it's in the order of “moon bamboo,” but that's the most natural order in Chinese and Japanese.

With a little research, I found this title has been used as the name of a linen company, a band, a song title, an actual person's name, the title for a piece of artwork featuring bamboo with a moon in the background, and a few other things. I added it here because many people searched for “bamboo moon” on my website, so here it is for you.


The typical Japanese pronunciation would probably be "tsu-ki ta-ke." However, this would not be the only possible pronunciation in Japanese (especially if used as a given name).

 èr yuè
 futatsuki / nigatsu
February Scroll

二月 is the Chinese, Japanese Kanji, and old Korean Hanja for the month of February.

This literally means the “second month” or “second moon” (of the year).

January

First Month

 yī yuè
 ichi gatsu
January Scroll

一月 is the month of January, the first month of the year, in Chinese, Japanese Kanji, and old Korean Hanja.

July

Seventh Month

 qī yuè
 shichigatsu
July Scroll

七月 is how Chinese and Japanese express July (also used in old Korean Hanja).

七月 literally means “seventh month” or “seventh moon.”

June

Sixth Month

 liù yuè
 roku gatsu
June Scroll

This is the month of June in Chinese, Japanese Kanji, and old Korean Hanja.

This was originally the sixth month of the Chinese lunar year, now used for the sixth month of the Gregorian calendar (also known as the Western or Christian calendar). 六月 literally mean “sixth month” or “sixth moon.”

 kagetsu
Kagetsu Scroll

花月 is a somewhat archaic Japanese word that literally means “flowers and the moon.”

Colloquially, this refers to “refined leisure,” or “an elegant pastime.”

Month of March

Third Month of the Year

 sān yuè
 mitsuki / sangatsu
Month of March Scroll

三月 is the Chinese, Japanese, and Chinese way to write the month of March.

This literally reads as “third month” or “third moon.”

The Month of May

Fifth Month

 wǔ yuè
 satsuki / go gatsu
The Month of May Scroll

五月 is the month of May in Chinese, Japanese Kanji, and old Korean Hanja.

This was originally the fifth month of the Chinese lunar year, now used for the fifth month of the Gregorian calendar (also known as the Western or Christian calendar). 五月 literally means “fifth month” or “fifth moon.”


Note: Sometimes Japanese parents will use this as a female given name, and use "Mei" (the sound of May in English) as the pronunciation.

 yuè guāng
 gekkou
Moonlight Scroll

月光 is the Chinese, old Korean Hanja, and Japanese Kanji title for moonlight.

This can also be used to describe a moonbeam and can be a given name in all three languages (pronounced as Rumi when used as a female given name in Japanese).

 xīn yuè
 shingetsu
New Moon Scroll

新月 literally means new moon.

This can also refer to a crescent moon or the first lunar phase that occurs every 29.53 days.

In Japanese, this can be the female given names Wakatsuki, Nidzuki, or Nitsuki. It can also be the surnames Shintsuki, Shingetsu, or Aratsuki.

October

Tenth Month

 shí yuè
 juu gatsu
October Scroll

十月 is how Chinese and Japanese express October (also used in old Korean Hanja).

十月 literally means “tenth month” or “tenth moon.”

September

Ninth Month

 jiǔ yuè
 kugatsu
September Scroll

九月 is the Chinese, Japanese Kanji, and old Korean Hanja for the month of September.

Originally this was for the ninth month of the lunar calendar, now used for the western (Gregorian) calendar.

This can also be the Japanese female given name Kugetsu.

December

Twelfth Month

 shí èr yuè
 juu ni gatsu
December Scroll

十二月 is December, the twelfth month of the year, in Chinese, Japanese Kanji, and old Korean Hanja.

November

Eleventh Month

 shí yī yuè
 juu ichi gatsu
November Scroll

十一月 is the Chinese, Japanese, and old Korean title for the month of November.

This literally means the eleventh month or moon.

 samidare
Samidare Scroll

This is the Japanese name Samidare.

The meaning of the name is “early-summer rain.” Literally, it's “5th moon rain,” which means “rain in the month of May.” This may refer to an anime character, a Japanese battleship in WWII, or a place in Japan called Samidare.

Sun Moon Stars

 rì yuè xīng
 nichigetsusei
Sun Moon Stars Scroll

日月星 is the shortest way to write a title (or word list) that means Sun, Moon, Stars.

Tsuki no Kokoro / Mind like the Moon

 tsuki no kokoro
Tsuki no Kokoro / Mind like the Moon Scroll

月の心 means “Mind like the Moon” or, more directly translated, “Moon of Mind.”

月の心 is a phrase used in Zen Buddhism and some Japanese martial arts.

Beauty of Nature

Ka-Chou-Fuu-Getsu

 ka chou fuu getsu
Beauty of Nature Scroll

花鳥風月 is the Japanese Kanji proverb for “Beauties of Nature.”

The dictionary definition is “the traditional themes of natural beauty in Japanese aesthetics.”

The Kanji each represents an element of nature that constitutes beauty in traditional Japanese art and culture.

The Kanji breakdown:
花 = ka = flower (also pronounced “hana”)
鳥 = chou = bird (also pronounced “tori”).
風 = fuu = wind (also pronounced “kaze”).
月 = getsu = moon (also pronounced “tsuki”)

Flower in the Mirror, Moon on Water

 jìng huā shuǐ yuè
 kyou ka sui getsu
Flower in the Mirror, Moon on Water Scroll

鏡花水月 is an old Asian proverb that means “flowers in a mirror and the moon reflected in the lake” or “flowers reflected on a mirror and the moon reflected on the water's surface.”

Literally, 鏡花水月 reads “Mirror Flower, Water Moon.”

Figuratively this can be used to represent a lot of different ideas. It can be used to express an unrealistic rosy view or viewing things through rose-tinted spectacles. So you can use it to relay an idea about something that is visible but has no substance, something that can be seen but not touched, or something beautiful but unattainable such as dreams or a mirage.

This expression is used to describe things like the subtle and profound beauty of poems that cannot be described in words.

鏡 = Mirror (or lens)
花 = Flower(s)
水 = Water
月 = Moon


Can also be written 水月鏡花 (just a slight change in word/character order).

The Sun, Moon, and Stars

 rì yuè xīng chén
 nichigetsuseishin
The Sun, Moon, and Stars Scroll

日月星辰 is a title that encompasses all of the heavenly bodies or celestial bodies.

Namely, this includes the Sun, Moon, and Stars of our universe.

Time Waits For No One

 sai getsu hito o ma ta zu
Time Waits For No One Scroll

歳月人を待たず is a Japanese idiom “Saigetsu hito o matazu” which means “Time waits for no one.”

Another way to put it is, “Time and tide stay for no man.”


Note: Because this selection contains some special Japanese Hiragana characters, it should be written by a Japanese calligrapher.

Mountain Travels Poem by Dumu

 yuǎn shàng hán shān shí jìng xiá bái yún shēng chù yǒu rén jiā tíng chē zuò ài fēng lín wǎn shuàng yè hóng yú èr yuè huā
Mountain Travels Poem by Dumu Scroll

This poem was written almost 1200 years ago during the Tang dynasty.

It depicts traveling up a place known as Cold Mountain, where some hearty people have built their homes. The traveler is overwhelmed by the beauty of the turning leaves of the maple forest that surrounds him just as night overtakes the day, and darkness prevails. His heart implores him to stop, and take in all of the beauty around him.

First, before you get to the full translation, I must tell you that Chinese poetry is a lot different than what we have in the west. Chinese words simply don't rhyme in the same way that English or other western languages do. Chinese poetry depends on rhythm and a certain beat of repeated numbers of characters.

I have done my best to translate this poem keeping a certain feel of the original poet. But some of the original beauty of the poem in its original Chinese will be lost in translation.


Far away on Cold Mountain, a stone path leads upwards.
Among white clouds, people's homes reside.
Stopping my carriage I must, as to admire the maple forest at nights fall.
In awe of autumn leaves showing more red than even flowers of early spring.


Hopefully, this poem will remind you to stop, and “take it all in” as you travel through life.
The poet's name is “Du Mu” in Chinese that is: 杜牧.
The title of the poem, “Mountain Travels” is: 山行
You can have the title, poet's name, and even “Tang Dynasty” written as an inscription on your custom wall scroll if you like.

More about the poet:

Dumu lived from 803-852 AD and was a leading Chinese poet during the later part of the Tang dynasty.
He was born in Chang'an, a city in central China and the former capital of the ancient Chinese empire in 221-206 BC. In present-day China, his birthplace is currently known as Xi'an, the home of the Terracotta Soldiers.

He was awarded his Jinshi degree (an exam administered by the emperor's court which leads to becoming an official of the court) at the age of 25 and went on to hold many official positions over the years. However, he never achieved a high rank, apparently because of some disputes between various factions, and his family's criticism of the government. His last post in the court was his appointment to the office of Secretariat Drafter.

During his life, he wrote scores of narrative poems, as well as a commentary on the Art of War and many letters of advice to high officials.

His poems were often very realistic and often depicted everyday life. He wrote poems about everything, from drinking beer in a tavern to weepy poems about lost love.

The thing that strikes you most is the fact even after 1200 years, not much has changed about the beauty of nature, toils, and troubles of love and beer drinking.


Not the results for 月 that you were looking for?

Below are some entries from our dictionary that may match your search...

Characters

If shown, 2nd row is Simp. Chinese

Pronunciation
Romanization
Simple Dictionary Definition

see styles
yuè
    yue4
yüeh
 tsuki
    つき

More info & calligraphy:

Moon
moon; month; monthly; CL:個|个[ge4],輪|轮[lun2]
(1) Moon; (2) month; (3) moonlight; (4) (See 衛星・1) (a) moon; natural satellite; (female given name) Runa
candra, 旅達 (旅達羅); 旂陀羅; 戰達羅; 戰捺羅 the moon, called also 蘇摩 soma, from the fermented juice of asclepias acida used in worship, and later personified in association with the moon. It has many other epithets, e. g. 印度 Indu, incorrectly intp. as marked like a hare; 創夜神 Niśākara, maker of the night; 星宿王 Nakṣatranātha, lord of constellations; 喜懷之頭飾 the crest of Siva; 蓮華王 Kumuda-pati, lotus lord; 白馬主 Śvetavājin, drawn by (or lord of) white horses; 大白光神 Śītāṃśu, the spirit with white rays; 冷光神 Sitamarici, the spirit with cool rays; 鹿形神 Mṛgāṅka, the spirit with marks m form like a deer; 野兎形神 Śaśi, ditto like a hare.

一月

see styles
yī yuè
    yi1 yue4
i yüeh
 mutsuki
    むつき

More info & calligraphy:

January
January; first month (of the lunar year)
one month; (adverbial noun) January; (female given name) Mutsuki

七月

see styles
qī yuè
    qi1 yue4
ch`i yüeh
    chi yüeh
 natsuki
    なつき

More info & calligraphy:

July
July; seventh month (of the lunar year)
(adverbial noun) July; (female given name) Natsuki

三月

see styles
sān yuè
    san1 yue4
san yüeh
 mitsuki
    みつき

More info & calligraphy:

Month of March
March; third month (of the lunar year)
three months; (female given name) Yayoi

九月

see styles
jiǔ yuè
    jiu3 yue4
chiu yüeh
 kugetsu
    くげつ

More info & calligraphy:

September
September; ninth month (of the lunar year)
(adverbial noun) September; (female given name) Kugetsu

二月

see styles
èr yuè
    er4 yue4
erh yüeh
 futatsuki
    ふたつき

More info & calligraphy:

February
February; second month (of the lunar year)
two months
second moon

五月

see styles
wǔ yuè
    wu3 yue4
wu yüeh
 mei / me
    めい

More info & calligraphy:

The Month of May
May; fifth month (of the lunar year)
(1) (obsolete) fifth month of the lunar calendar; (2) (kana only) satsuki azalea (Rhododendron indicum); (adverbial noun) May; (female given name) Mei

八月

see styles
bā yuè
    ba1 yue4
pa yüeh
 yatsuki
    やつき

More info & calligraphy:

August
August; eighth month (of the lunar year)
(adverbial noun) August; (female given name) Yatsuki
eighth month

六月

see styles
liù yuè
    liu4 yue4
liu yüeh
 rokugatsu
    ろくがつ

More info & calligraphy:

June
June; sixth month (of the lunar year)
(adverbial noun) June; (place-name) Rokugatsu

十月

see styles
shí yuè
    shi2 yue4
shih yüeh
 totsuki
    とつき

More info & calligraphy:

October
October; tenth month (of the lunar year)
(adverbial noun) October; (female given name) Totsuki

四月

see styles
sì yuè
    si4 yue4
ssu yüeh
 yotsuki
    よつき

More info & calligraphy:

April
April; fourth month (of the lunar year)
four months; (personal name) Watanuki
Āṣāḍha, the fourth month.

新月

see styles
xīn yuè
    xin1 yue4
hsin yüeh
 shingetsu
    しんげつ

More info & calligraphy:

New Moon
new moon; crescent
(See 三日月) new moon; crescent moon; (female given name) Wakatsuki

月光

see styles
yuè guāng
    yue4 guang1
yüeh kuang
 gekkou / gekko
    げっこう

More info & calligraphy:

Moonlight
moonlight
moonlight; moonbeam; (female given name) Rumi
Candraprabha, 戰達羅鉢刺婆 Moonlight. One of the three honoured ones in the Vajradhātu, and in the Mañjuśrī court of the Garbhadhātu, known also as 淸涼金剛.

花月

see styles
 kagetsu
    かげつ

More info & calligraphy:

Kagetsu
(1) (archaism) flowers and the moon; (2) (archaism) refined leisure; elegant pastime; (surname) Hanatsuki

五月雨

see styles
 samidare; satsukiame
    さみだれ; さつきあめ

More info & calligraphy:

Samidare
early-summer rain; (place-name) Samidare

十一月

see styles
shí yī yuè
    shi2 yi1 yue4
shih i yüeh
 juuichigatsu / juichigatsu
    じゅういちがつ

More info & calligraphy:

November
November; eleventh month (of the lunar year)
(adverbial noun) November

十二月

see styles
shí èr yuè
    shi2 er4 yue4
shih erh yüeh
 kanna
    かんな

More info & calligraphy:

December
December; twelfth month (of the lunar year)
(adverbial noun) December; (female given name) Kanna

日月星辰

see styles
 jitsugetsuseishin; nichigetsuseishin / jitsugetsuseshin; nichigetsuseshin
    じつげつせいしん; にちげつせいしん

More info & calligraphy:

The Sun, Moon, and Stars
(yoji) the Sun, the Moon and the stars; the heavenly bodies

花鳥風月

see styles
 kachoufuugetsu / kachofugetsu
    かちょうふうげつ

More info & calligraphy:

Beauty of Nature
(1) (yoji) (See 花鳥諷詠) beauties of nature; the traditional themes of natural beauty in Japanese aesthetics; (2) artistic pursuits involving nature themes

鏡花水月


镜花水月

see styles
jìng huā shuǐ yuè
    jing4 hua1 shui3 yue4
ching hua shui yüeh
 kyoukasuigetsu / kyokasuigetsu
    きょうかすいげつ

More info & calligraphy:

Flower in the Mirror, Moon on Water
lit. flowers in a mirror and the moon reflected in the lake (idiom); fig. an unrealistic rosy view; viewing things through rose-tinted spectacles; also written 水鏡花|水镜花
(yoji) flowers reflected on a mirror and the moon reflected on the water's surface; something that is visible but having no substance; the subtle and profound beauty of poems that cannot be described in words

歳月人を待たず

see styles
 saigetsuhitoomatazu
    さいげつひとをまたず

More info & calligraphy:

Time Waits For No One
(expression) (proverb) time waits for no man; time and tide stay for no man

か月

see styles
 kagetsu
    かげつ
(counter) months (period of)

ケ月

see styles
 kagetsu
    かげつ
(counter) months (period of)

万月

see styles
 mangetsu
    まんげつ
(surname) Mangetsu

上月

see styles
shàng yuè
    shang4 yue4
shang yüeh
 joutsuki / jotsuki
    じょうつき
last month
(surname) Jōtsuki

下月

see styles
xià yuè
    xia4 yue4
hsia yüeh
 shimozuki
    しもづき
next month
(surname) Shimozuki

不月

see styles
bù yuè
    bu4 yue4
pu yüeh
amenorrhoea; irregular menstruation

丘月

see styles
 kyuugetsu / kyugetsu
    きゅうげつ
(given name) Kyūgetsu

両月

see styles
 wachi
    わち
(place-name) Wachi

中月

see styles
 nakatsuki
    なかつき
(surname) Nakatsuki

Click here for more results from our dictionary

The following table may be helpful for those studying Chinese or Japanese...

Title CharactersRomaji (Romanized Japanese)Various forms of Romanized Chinese
Moontsukiyuè / yue4 / yueyüeh
April四月shi gatsu / shigatsusì yuè / si4 yue4 / si yue / siyuessu yüeh / ssuyüeh
August八月hachigatsu / yatsukibā yuè / ba1 yue4 / ba yue / bayuepa yüeh / payüeh
Bamboo Moon月竹tsuki take / tsukitakeyuè zhú / yue4 zhu2 / yue zhu / yuezhuyüeh chu / yüehchu
February二月futatsuki / nigatsuèr yuè / er4 yue4 / er yue / eryueerh yüeh / erhyüeh
January一月ichi gatsu / ichigatsuyī yuè / yi1 yue4 / yi yue / yiyuei yüeh / iyüeh
July七月shichigatsuqī yuè / qi1 yue4 / qi yue / qiyuech`i yüeh / chiyüeh / chi yüeh
June六月roku gatsu / rokugatsuliù yuè / liu4 yue4 / liu yue / liuyueliu yüeh / liuyüeh
Kagetsu花月kagetsu
Month of March三月mitsuki / sangatsusān yuè / san1 yue4 / san yue / sanyuesan yüeh / sanyüeh
The Month of May五月satsuki / go gatsu
satsuki / gogatsu
wǔ yuè / wu3 yue4 / wu yue / wuyuewu yüeh / wuyüeh
Moonlight月光gekkou / gekoyuè guāng
yue4 guang1
yue guang
yueguang
yüeh kuang
yüehkuang
New Moon新月shingetsuxīn yuè / xin1 yue4 / xin yue / xinyuehsin yüeh / hsinyüeh
October十月juu gatsu / juugatsu / ju gatsushí yuè / shi2 yue4 / shi yue / shiyueshih yüeh / shihyüeh
September九月kugatsujiǔ yuè / jiu3 yue4 / jiu yue / jiuyuechiu yüeh / chiuyüeh
December十二月juu ni gatsu
juunigatsu
ju ni gatsu
shí èr yuè
shi2 er4 yue4
shi er yue
shieryue
shih erh yüeh
shiherhyüeh
November十一月juu ichi gatsu
juuichigatsu
ju ichi gatsu
shí yī yuè
shi2 yi1 yue4
shi yi yue
shiyiyue
shih i yüeh
shihiyüeh
Samidare五月雨samidare
Sun Moon Stars日月星nichigetsuseirì yuè xīng
ri4 yue4 xing1
ri yue xing
riyuexing
jih yüeh hsing
jihyüehhsing
Tsuki no Kokoro
Mind like the Moon
月の心tsuki no kokoro
tsukinokokoro
Beauty of Nature花鳥風月ka chou fuu getsu
kachoufuugetsu
ka cho fu getsu
Flower in the Mirror, Moon on Water鏡花水月
镜花水月
kyou ka sui getsu
kyoukasuigetsu
kyo ka sui getsu
jìng huā shuǐ yuè
jing4 hua1 shui3 yue4
jing hua shui yue
jinghuashuiyue
ching hua shui yüeh
chinghuashuiyüeh
The Sun, Moon, and Stars日月星辰nichigetsuseishinrì yuè xīng chén
ri4 yue4 xing1 chen2
ri yue xing chen
riyuexingchen
jih yüeh hsing ch`en
jihyüehhsingchen
jih yüeh hsing chen
Time Waits For No One歳月人を待たずsai getsu hito o ma ta zu
saigetsuhitoomatazu
Mountain Travels Poem by Dumu遠上寒山石徑斜白雲生處有人家停車坐愛楓林晚霜葉紅於二月花
远上寒山石径斜白云生处有人家停车坐爱枫林晚霜叶红于二月花
yuǎn shàng hán shān shí jìng xiá bái yún shēng chù yǒu rén jiā tíng chē zuò ài fēng lín wǎn shuàng yè hóng yú èr yuè huā
yuan3 shang4 han2 shan1 shi2 jing4 xia2 bai2 yun2 sheng1 chu4 you3 ren2 jia1 ting2 che1 zuo4 ai4 feng1 lin2 wan3 shuang4 ye4 hong2 yu2 er4 yue4 hua1
yuan shang han shan shi jing xia bai yun sheng chu you ren jia ting che zuo ai feng lin wan shuang ye hong yu er yue hua
yüan shang han shan shih ching hsia pai yün sheng ch`u yu jen chia t`ing ch`e tso ai feng lin wan shuang yeh hung yü erh yüeh hua
yüan shang han shan shih ching hsia pai yün sheng chu yu jen chia ting che tso ai feng lin wan shuang yeh hung yü erh yüeh hua
In some entries above you will see that characters have different versions above and below a line.
In these cases, the characters above the line are Traditional Chinese, while the ones below are Simplified Chinese.


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All of our calligraphy wall scrolls are handmade.

When the calligrapher finishes creating your artwork, it is taken to my art mounting workshop in Beijing where a wall scroll is made by hand from a combination of silk, rice paper, and wood.
After we create your wall scroll, it takes at least two weeks for air mail delivery from Beijing to you.

Allow a few weeks for delivery. Rush service speeds it up by a week or two for $10!

When you select your calligraphy, you'll be taken to another page where you can choose various custom options.


A nice Chinese calligraphy wall scroll

The wall scroll that Sandy is holding in this picture is a "large size"
single-character wall scroll.
We also offer custom wall scrolls in small, medium, and an even-larger jumbo size.

A professional Chinese Calligrapher

Professional calligraphers are getting to be hard to find these days.
Instead of drawing characters by hand, the new generation in China merely type roman letters into their computer keyboards and pick the character that they want from a list that pops up.

There is some fear that true Chinese calligraphy may become a lost art in the coming years. Many art institutes in China are now promoting calligraphy programs in hopes of keeping this unique form of art alive.

Trying to learn Chinese calligrapher - a futile effort

Even with the teachings of a top-ranked calligrapher in China, my calligraphy will never be good enough to sell. I will leave that to the experts.

A high-ranked Chinese master calligrapher that I met in Zhongwei

The same calligrapher who gave me those lessons also attracted a crowd of thousands and a TV crew as he created characters over 6-feet high. He happens to be ranked as one of the top 100 calligraphers in all of China. He is also one of very few that would actually attempt such a feat.


Check out my lists of Japanese Kanji Calligraphy Wall Scrolls and Old Korean Hanja Calligraphy Wall Scrolls.