Judging from the signatures, it may be Zhu and Yi Zhu.
Whether it's the whole or the fine print, it's very amateur, and it's quite bluffing for laymen to look at it.
As can be seen from its words, I haven't practiced pasting, I wrote it by my own ideas, or copied some parts and strokes. For example, The Picture on the Bone was written by Wang Duo, a great calligrapher in the late Ming and early Qing Dynasties. An expert can see at a glance what level the street is, and it has no basic functions.
Wang Duo once said: "If a book does not live in the Jin Dynasty, it will eventually enter the wild road." "If you don't learn from the past, you will fall into the wild customs all the way."
Jin refers to the sum of Wang Xizhi, a calligrapher in Jin Dynasty. Everyone knows that the best script in the world is Wang Xizhi's Preface to Lanting. I hope the author can learn and practice.
If you want to be a real calligrapher, you must first know something about calligraphy theory.