Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Why do boys like to marry Vietnamese women? It turns out that they wear cheongsam.

Why do boys like to marry Vietnamese women? It turns out that they wear cheongsam.

Vietnamese national costume

Vietnamese girls wear robes at important festivals or wedding banquets.

Traditional festivals and folk customs: Like China, Vietnamese traditional festivals include Spring Festival, Tomb-Sweeping Day, Dragon Boat Festival, Mid-Autumn Festival and Double Ninth Festival, among which Spring Festival is the biggest festival.

Dress simply. On formal occasions, men wear suits and women wear national "robes" (similar to cheongsam) and pants. Eating habits are similar to those of some ethnic groups in Guangdong, Guangxi and Yunnan. Eat with chopsticks, like to eat light, cold and sour food. It is forbidden for Vietnamese to take photos with three people. It is considered unlucky not to light a cigarette for three people with matches or lighters. Don't want people to touch your head. Don't point your feet at others when sitting on the floor.

Like many ethnic groups, Vietnamese people have special costumes on important festivals such as weddings, funerals and celebrations. For example, at a traditional wedding, both the bride and groom must wear formal traditional clothes. The groom wears a black or dark blue silk robe and a hat of the same color. The bride is wearing a white silk yellow national costume, a white tulle robe and a yellow cloth hat. Because some Vietnamese believe in Catholicism and wear western-style white gauze wedding dresses when they get married, and more and more young people prefer western-style dresses, shops renting western-style dresses can be seen everywhere. At the funeral, family members need plain traditional clothes and white cloth on their heads. Men attending the sacrifice need black clothes, while women wear plain clothes.

Aobao is the most traditional national costume in Vietnam, mostly made of silk. Its original style draws lessons from the characteristics of China Hanfu, but it also adds the national characteristics of the Vietnamese themselves. Later, many clothing experts, including French designers, modified "Aodai". The "Aodai" we see today was probably shaped in the 1930s.

Many people think that "Aodai" is a bit similar to China's cheongsam, but in fact, "Aodai" is a kind of dress that incorporates many cultural elements, which can best reflect the simple character of Vietnamese men and the feminine figure of Vietnamese girls.