Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A mandarin collar, standing collar, Nehru collar, band collar or choker collar is a short unfolded stand-up collar style on a shirt or jacket. The style derives its Western name from the mandarin bureaucrats in Qing-era China that employed it as part of their uniform. The length along a mandarin collar is straight, with either straight or ...
Tangzhuang (Chinese: 唐裝; pinyin: Tángzhuāng; lit. 'Chinese suit'), sometimes called Tang suit, [1]: 50 is a kind of Chinese jacket with Manchu origins and Han influences, characterized with a mandarin collar closing at the front with frog buttons.
The Vietnamese used to wear the áo giao lĩnh (cross-collared robe) which were identical to those worn by Han Chinese people before adopting the áo ngũ thân [72] [73]), [74] a loose-fitting shirt with a stand-up collar and a diagonal right side closure which run from the neck to the armpit and trousers.
Frog fasteners are usual to garments of Asian design, such as a shirt or coat with a mandarin collar, which features frog fasteners at the shoulder and down the front of the garment. In the design of a garment, frogging is the use of braided frog fasteners as a detail of the overall design of the garment.
A jacket with a band collar. A band collar is a standing band-shaped collar that encircles the neck without a full turndown or a collar "cape". [1] It can be any height or "stand", but is usually under 2" at the front, so as not to push up into the chin. Variations of the band collar are the clerical collar, the mandarin collar and the cadet ...
A yuanlingshan (Chinese: 圓領衫; pinyin: yuánlǐngshān; lit. 'round collar jacket') is a type of round-collared upper garment in the traditional Chinese style of clothing known as Hanfu; it is also referred to as a yuanlingpao (圓領袍; yuánlǐngpáo; 'round collar gown/robe') or a panlingpao (盤領袍; pánlǐngpáo) when used as a robe (called paofu [1]: 17 ).
Mandarin collar, a short shirt or jacket collar that is not folded from Qing era China; Mandarin square, a badge worn by officials in Imperial China; Companies
Detachable collars were therefore produced and sold separately from the garments. [2] They were then used for decorative purposes, for keeping its wearer warm and in formal official attire. [ 2 ] During the late Qing, the high collar was eventually integrated to both the clothing of the Chinese and the Manchu as standard features. [ 2 ]