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  2. Chinese embroidery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_embroidery

    Currently the earliest real sample of silk embroidery discovered in China is from a tomb in Mashan in Hubei province identified with the Zhanguo period (5th–3rd centuries BC). After the opening of Silk Route in the Han dynasty, the silk production and trade flourished. In the 14th century, the Chinese silk embroidery production reached its ...

  3. Suzhou embroidery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suzhou_embroidery

    Suzhou embroidery, Su embroidery or Su xiu (simplified Chinese: 苏绣; traditional Chinese: 蘇繡) is the embroidery created around the city of Suzhou, Jiangsu, China. It is one of the oldest embroidery techniques in the world and is the most representative type of art in Chinese embroidery .

  4. Chinese auspicious ornaments in textile and clothing

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_auspicious...

    In ancient China, auspicious ornaments were often either embroidered or woven into textile and clothing. [1] They are also used on religious and ritual clothing (e.g. Daojiao fushi which is Taoist clothing [3]: 101 and Chinese Buddhist clothing) and in Xifu, Chinese opera costumes. [4]

  5. Sichuan embroidery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sichuan_embroidery

    Sichuan embroidery is one of the so-called "four great embroideries of China" along with Cantonese embroidery, Suzhou embroidery and Xiang embroidery.Throughout its history, Sichuan embroidery developed a quality of being smooth, bright, neat, and influenced by its own geographical environment, various customs and cultures, with significant foreign influences being Sasanian, Sogdian and ...

  6. Chinese clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_clothing

    In the Shang dynasty, the primary materials for clothing included leather, silk, ramie, and kudzu. The upper class favored naturally dyed silk and leather, while the lower class, due to limited access to silk, primarily used hemp, ramie, and kudzu fibers. [7] [8] As textile technology advanced, silk and ramie fabrics became increasingly ...

  7. Chinese patchwork - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_patchwork

    Chinese patchwork is a traditional form of Chinese needlework which has been widely circulated in Chinese folk arts. [1] In China, patchwork has been used for millennia. [2] Chinese patchwork is made by sewing scraps of fabric together into a desired shape to form design art with a distinctive theme. [3] This technique is still used in Chinese ...

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