Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Representative of Tang Hanfu

Representative of Tang Hanfu

The representative of Tang suit is Tang suit.

Tang costume, a traditional costume in China, is a Tang style in the costume system of Han nationality, which is characterized by horizontal collar, right collar and lace. Represents a shirt and skirt with a chest, Tang's round neck and a skirt with a cross collar, etc. Tang clothes should be different from modern clothes.

There are three kinds of women's coats in Tang suit: Yan suit, coat and blouse. Yan is a coat or cotton-padded jacket with a narrow and short body. The coat is longer than the robe, the body is loose, and there are also coats or cotton-padded clothes. Yan and coat have narrow sleeves and long sleeves. Hanfu is the embodiment of China's "country of clothes", "country of ceremony", "splendid china" and "country of frontier fortress", bearing the excellent craftsmanship and aesthetics of the Chinese nation, inheriting more than 30 intangible cultural heritages in China and protecting the arts and crafts in China.

Modern Hanfu in Tang Dynasty:

1, square skirt: the style is stiff, and women can't show beauty in it. Therefore, in the Tang Dynasty, skirts were popular in the form of high waist and wide swing mopping the floor, which not only revealed the curvy beauty of human body structure, but also showed rich and elegant demeanor. The structure of this skirt must be organically adapted to the main structure of the human body, so it is a pleated skirt with a round bottom, or a flared skirt.

2, short skirt: characterized by high waist, generally above the waist, and some even tied under the armpit, giving people a pretty and slender feeling. "Luoshan leaves are heavily embroidered, and Jinfeng Yinyan has its own traces." Mei Dai wins the color of day lily, and the red skirt envies pomegranate flowers. The skirts in the Tang Dynasty are colorful, with red, purple, yellow and green competing for each other, especially the red skirt. The popularity of red skirts in the streets is not the patent of modern people. As early as the prosperous Tang Dynasty, dance skirts were dyed red by pomegranate flowers everywhere.