1. Temporary post. Lin Tie is the basis for all calligraphy practice. Lin Tie is not as good as copying. Before writing, you need to carefully consider the stroke order of the original calligraphy and figure out which stroke is the longest in the entire calligraphy and the relationship between each stroke. This is reading Tie. Post-it: Carefully write down the writing method of each word to ensure that you can write almost the same words without the post-it. Compare it with the original post, combine your own characteristics, write by hand without posting, and analyze the difference between your own words and the original post, and take the essence and discard the dross.
2. Font. There is no rule that you have to start practicing calligraphy from regular script, but I think that people who write well in running script may not necessarily write well in regular script. Regular script is a good way to practice "stability" and master the structure of characters. After writing it horizontally and vertically, it will not be bad no matter how you write running script.
3. The strokes should be in order. The stroke order of running script will be slightly different from regular script, so you need to think about it when practicing calligraphy.
4. Use a pen. Picking a handy pen is equivalent to having a useful gun.