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  2. Color in Chinese culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_in_Chinese_culture

    Chinese cardinal and intermediary colors. Chinese culture attaches certain values to colors, [1] such as considering some to be auspicious (吉利) or inauspicious (不利). The Chinese word for 'color' is yánsè (顏色). In Literary Chinese, the character 色 more literally corresponds to 'color in the face' or 'emotion'. It was generally ...

  3. Five Races Under One Union - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Races_Under_One_Union

    Despite the uprisings targeting a Manchu-dominated regime, Sun Yat-sen, Song Jiaoren and Huang Xing unanimously advocated racial integration, which was symbolized by the five-color flag. [11] They promoted a view of the non-Han ethnicities as also being Chinese, despite their being a relatively small percentage of the population. [12]

  4. Han purple and Han blue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Han_Purple_and_Han_Blue

    Early China seems not to have used a natural purple pigment and was the first to develop a synthetic one. [1] Han blue in its pure form is, as the name suggests, blue. Han purple in its pure form is actually a dark blue, that is close to indigo. It is a purple in the way the term is used in colloquial English, i.e., it is a color between red ...

  5. Flag of China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flag_of_China

    The color should mainly be bright red [11] (an early draft of the notice had the color as dark red, but this was changed to bright red by Zhou Enlai). [12] Zeng Liansong, a citizen from Wenzhou, Zhejiang, was working in Shanghai when the announcement came out; he wanted to create a flag design to express his patriotic enthusiasm for the new ...

  6. Red in culture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_in_culture

    Red is also the traditional color of seats in opera houses and theaters. Scarlet academic gowns are worn by new Doctors of Philosophy at degree ceremonies at Oxford University and other schools. In China, it is considered the color of good fortune and prosperity, and it is the color traditionally worn by brides.

  7. Chinese pigment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_pigment

    Chinese pigments is similar to Western gouache paint in that it contains more glue than watercolours, but more so than gouache. The high glue content makes the pigment bind better to Chinese paper and silk as well as enabling works of art to survive the wet-mounting process of Chinese hanging scroll mountings without smudging or bleeding.

  8. List of Chinese flags - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_flags

    Flag Duration Use Description 1 July 1997 – present: Flag of Hong Kong [2]: A white, five-petal Bauhinia blakeana on a red field with 1 star on each of the petals. The Chinese name of Bauhinia × blakeana has also been frequently shortened as 紫荊/紫荆 (洋 yáng means "foreign" in Chinese, and this would be deemed inappropriate by the PRC government), although 紫荊/紫荆 refers to ...

  9. Danqing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Danqing

    Danqing is painted with an ink brush, color ink, or Chinese pigments using natural plant, mineral, and both metal pigments and pigment blends. [1] Danqing literally means "red and blue-green" in Chinese, or more academically, "vermillion and cyan"; they are two of the most used colors in ancient Chinese painting. [2]