clothing esmartdesignKang's stock has always included something for everyone, but recently his sales volume began to slide. Asia Dress For those with flabby arms, choose a Qipao / Cheongsam with three-quarter sleeves to hide the excess flesh. "Customers enter my shop in the hope of finding something new. If they cannot find anything out of the ordinary after three or four visits, they won't come again for a long time." Asia Dress Women with short necks should pick a Qipao / Cheongsam with a lower collar so that it helps make the neck look longer. To cater to the traditional style trend, therefore, Kang refurbished his shop in a more traditional layout. Asia Dress On the other hand, women with longer necks can look stunning in a Qipao cut with a high collar. He also employed a tailor from Shanghai, China's fashion metropolis. Since making these changes, his custom has increased substantially, and he has a thick pad of advance orders. Silk Clothes For those who are disproportionate in shape, with either a heavy top or a heavy bottom, wear Cheongsam separates. According to a survey conducted by a popular newspaper, the people that favor traditional-style dresses are mostly of the "Chinese middle class;" well paid, well educated, and with overseas study or work experience, mostly in the 30-40 age range.
Asia Dress In the 1990s, China went through yet another stage of the clothing dilemmas with which it had long been afflicted as a facet of attempts at modernization. "I hungered for the life I saw depicted in Western films when I was a girl. Now I have almost everything I ever dreamed of: a spacious house, quality furniture, and a private lawn. In 1995, at the Xi'an Academy of Arts, I met a young student designer who was, incidentally, the only woman I ever saw then to wear a hippie-style, full, long, tie-dyed skirt: all others stuck either to pants or to a short-skirted business suit. Silk Clothes Top-heavy women should avoid big, contrasting prints on the Qipao top. Choose a simple one-colour top. She gave me a paper she had written and entitled, significantly, "Dressing Doubts." It began: Two decades ago, it was customary to wear and see simple, inexpensive blue or green clothing. But I am far from content during my leisure time." Asia Dress People did not dare stand in the sunlight of bright, variegated colours. . . . Now it is hard to avoid losing one's sense of direction. Focusing on women's clothing, the paper proceeded: How can public relations women and factory women dress the same? Enterprises are now divided into state-owned and private, Chinese-foreign ventures and wholly-foreign-owned enterprises. Asia Dress A straight-cut skirt with a side slit is ideal for women who have large bottoms. Now the dressing habits of teachers have become a constant topic of student conversation. Those who dress unsuitably will lose the respect of their students. Even if teachers are outstanding in scholarship, if they wear plebian clothing or other unsuitable dress, students will have doubts as to their ability to know the past and keep abreast of the present. Asia Dress Another factor affecting Chinese "dressing doubts," but one not considered by this budding designer, was the otherwise pervasive rural-urban distinction, which in China is of far greater social importance than in the west. Wang Xinyi, a 33-year-old senior employee at a foreign company, is troubled by spiritual loss, despite living a lifestyle enviable to most Chinese people. Silk Clothes "When I first saw a traditional-style, loosely fitting silk gown, an image of me, in my cozy, spacious sitting-room, wearing this dress while sitting on my comfortable sofa, reading, with a cup of tea at hand, sprang to mind, the whole scenario bathed in a soft orange light of total tranquility. Asia Dress Clothing make the man, as the saying goes. As for daily casual wear, in summer, you can choose some thin fabrics such as pure cotton delaine printed with little flowers, sack and yarn cloth, silk, and poplin. In spring and winter, there is chemical fiber or blended cloth like gleaming silk and thinner woolen cloth. I bought the dress without a second thought." The design of traditional clothes has been much improved. Yu Chenggen, now aged 70, and son of a tailor famous in Beijing in the 1920-30s, complains that such clothes look better displayed than actually worn. Asia Dress In recent years, there has been a strong move to reinstate the cheongsam as everyday attire. Fashion designers constantly modify the traditional form (occasionally with outrageous results) and in the Hong Kong movie In the Mood for Love, the endless parade of exquisitely tailored cheongsams stole the show from the attractive stars, prompting a brief revival of the dress. One traditional costume that has circumvented obsolescence and Western influences to become firmly embedded in modern life is the Vietnamese ao dai. Asia Dress The ao dai got its start in 1744, when Lord Vu Vuong of the Nguyen Dynasty decreed both men and women should wear an ensemble of trousers and a gown-like blouse. It was not until 1930 however that the ao dai as we know it really appeared, when the top was lengthened to reach the floor, the bodice was fitted to the curves and raglan sleeves were incorporated. Asia Dress Like the cheongsam, the upheavals of the twentieth century made the ao dai unfashionable for long periods. This was particularly true in the seventies, as austerity drives caused the Vietnamese to shelve the ao dai as an impractical luxury. It was only with the brightening economy of the late eighties and the early nineties that the ao dai made its comeback and today, the dress is a common sight on Vietnamese streets. Asia Dress It is the standard uniform of schoolgirls. It can be seen on office women going about their daily tasks. Respectable matrons doing their morning grocery shopping often step out in ao dais. Traditionally, the colour of the ao dai indicated age: pure white for girls, soft pastel colours for young, marriageable woman and strong, rich colours for the older ladies. Asia Dress Of course, with the changing whims of fashion and the availability of lush materials, the ao dais seen on the streets are often altered to be short sleeved, high hemmed or embroidered; practically every modification is tried in the quest to impress, but the basic form remains the same. Asia Dress Even in the United States, the forces of conformity hasn’t been enough to staunch the ao dai’s popularity — after years of complete assimilation with the local community, the Vietnamese Americans are increasingly showing their pride in the heritage, with many communities staging Ms. Ao Dai pageants to celebrate their traditions.In the 1980's, western suits began to be put on by national leaders. Shortly after, the suit was worn by every walk of society, from leaders to laborers. Asia Dress The western suit, at that time, was considered a standard dress for China. The people's concept regarding clothes underwent great change. High-heeled shoes and qipao once again became fashion. People were also surprised to see that there were are also elegant dresses in China. There was no limitation of regulations on clothing anymore. Asia Dress The open-door political policy finally leads to an open view of fashion. Through consideration of Chinese clothing styles, the dramatic cultural, social, and especially political changes that have occurred in Chinese society are explored. The clothing styles are like markers of the shifting political configurations 20th-century China. Politics and fashion have always linked together and illustrated the Chinese history. Asia Dress The 'Chinese gown' Lu Xun referred to was of course the qipao (or cheongsam in Cantonese), a style sometimes considered the sort of Chinese national dress to be equated with the Indian sari, the Korean hanbok and the Japanese kimono, but it is not nearly so well established. Asia Dress Concentrating on skirts, he seemed to assume that pants were also worn, and they could sometimes be seen peeping beneath his reconstructed gowns. With the coming of the Manchus, the Chinese resisted the conquerors' attempts to force them to give up the old-style Ming costume; some patriots indeed declared themselves ready to die for it. Eventually the men compromised, wearing Manchu styles in life and Ming styles in the coffin, while women were left more or less to their own devices. Asia Dress In the end, the Manchu women's tunic evolved into the qipao, which was consecrated as formal dress by the KMT (The Kuomintang, the political party led by Chiang Kaishek) in 1928. It is still relatively accepted in Taiwan, but after Liberation in 1949, the qipao disappeared on the mainland, except perhaps for formal visits to other countries on the part of official wives. Asia Dress Even then, there were dangers. The wife of Liu Shaoqi, who was toppled during the Cultural Revolution, was criticized for having worn a qipao three years previously on a state visit to Indonesia. My own informants agreed emphatically that it was then taboo. Asia Dress But there was a notable exception, namely Song Qingling (the wife of Sun Yatsen, the founder of the Chinese republic) who throughout the Cultural Revolution continued to wear a black qipao and even painted her eyebrows and her lips. Asia Dress One of my informants (Li Fang) recalled that when, as a child, she saw Song's picture in a magazine, she assumed that this was a bad woman until it was delicately explained to her that in fact this was the widow of the great Sun Yatsen, and that nobody could say anything against her qipao. My informant's mother, however, reported that her family did have one hidden in a closet, and that her own mother had been married in one. Asia Dress She recalled that the ban on qipao seemed to date from the 1961 Si Qing ('Four Cleanlinesses') movement. This was an anti-corruption campaign that in some ways pre-figured the Cultural Revolution by diverting popular sentiment away from official corruption to focus on supposed popular corruption. In any case, the qipao in mainland China then became, as it still is, something associated with the stage and with official and commercial hospitality -- airline hostesses and hotel staff. Even in 'entertainment' it is sometimes viewed as problematic. Silk Clothes As Antonia Finnane pointed out, Deng Xiaoying, China's foremost female conductor, having seen a film that contained qipao-clad Hong Kong prostitutes, refused to share a stage with a singer who wore one (Finnane 6). Asia Dress Other mainland Chinese with whom I spoke confirmed the qipao's indelible association with prostitution. As "national dress," it seems to have been compromised. What replaced the qipao as a politically and socially approved outfit was, of course, the drab and shapeless blue, green or grey pants and jackets for both sexes, sometimes referred to as the "Mao suit," although it was earlier pioneered by none other than Sun Yatsen himself. Silk Clothes The practical purpose behind its promulgation lay both the problems of clothing vast population in a poor country in the most efficient way possible, and in the egalitarian ideology behind Chinese communism. Yet almost immediately some voices were raised in discontent. Asia Dress As early as 1955, a national conference was held in response to letters from readers expressing dissatisfaction with universal drabness. As in many parts of the world, dress in China is and has always been considered a convenience enabling the observer to rank-order strangers, a process vital to social interaction anywhere. Asia Dress In China it used to be the practice to integrate the logos or badges of rank into the costume itself. Little has since changed, except that the badges of rank are not quite so blatant. The (unsuccessful) attempt to eliminate this practice, which went so far as to eliminate the insignia of rank on military uniforms, was one of the aims of Chinese dress reform policies under Mao.
© Copyright clothing.esmartdesign.com 2007 |