enow.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: chinese female general 3 piece costume

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fengguan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fengguan

    Liulongsan fengguan (Chinese: 六龍三鳳冠) is the 6-dragons-3-phoenixes crown. Sanlonger fengguan (Chinese: 三龍二鳳冠) is the 3-dragons-2-phoenixes crown. Only the crowns of empresses and crown princesses (wife of crown prince) can have temple ornaments adorned, with the empress's crown having 6 blades of temple ornaments (3 on each ...

  3. List of hanfu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Hanfu

    [3] [4] Ming Zhì sūn fú or yisefu 质孙服 or 一色服 "robe of one colour" Introduced in Yuan; later became a uniform for the military officials Ming. Yuan – Ming Rúqún: 襦裙 "Jacket and skirt" An upper garment covered by a separate skirt. A common clothing for women. Pre-Qin – Modern Ǎoqún/ Shānqún. 袄裙/衫裙

  4. Hanfu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanfu

    The women's skirts were characterized with high waistline which created a silhouette which looked similar to the Empire dresses of Napoleonic France; however, the construction of the assemble differed from the ones worn in Western countries as Han Chinese women assemble consisted of a separate skirt and upper garment which show low décolletage.

  5. Chinese clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_clothing

    The Yuan dynasty was an era of ethnic integration in Chinese history, and the costumes and clothing fully reflected this feature. Genghis Khan , the founder of the Yuan dynasty , built the Khanate since 1206, and after the destruction of Western Xia and Jin, its ethnic composition was mainly dominated by Mongols.

  6. Zaju chuishao fu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zaju_chuishao_fu

    Zaju chuishao fu (traditional Chinese: 雜 裾 垂 髾 服; simplified Chinese: 杂裾垂髾服; pinyin: zájū chuíshāo fú), also called Guiyi (Chinese: 袿衣), [1] and sometimes referred as "Swallow-tailed Hems and Flying Ribbons clothing" or "swallow tail" clothing for short in English, [2]: 62–64 [3] is a form of set of attire in hanfu which was worn by Chinese women.

  7. Women's clothing in China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_clothing_in_China

    Two women wearing cheongsam in a 1930s Shanghai advertisement. The cheongsam is a body-hugging (modified in Shanghai) one-piece Chinese dress for women; the male version is the changshan. It is known in Mandarin Chinese as the qípáo (旗袍; Wade-Giles ch'i-p'ao), and is also known in English as a mandarin gown.

  1. Ads

    related to: chinese female general 3 piece costume