| LIN
Hong, a bank clerk, still has her grandmother's qipao -- a
snugly-fitting traditional Chinese gown with a high collar
and a split skirt. She normally keeps it at the back of her
wardrobe, where it stays until summer comes around, when she
gives it an annual airing. Now, however, Lin has decided to
make a few alterations to up-date her qipao and actually wear
it. This feminine garment from the old world has the bewitching
effect of softening her voice, refining her demeanor, and,
most important, lifting her spirits. Lin has discovered that
the same is true for a good many of her colleagues and other
contemporaries.
The fever for traditional-style clothes was given impetus
at the Shanghai APEC meeting last year, when the leaders of
various countries appeared at the closing ceremony wearing
Chinese-style silk jackets. Traditional-style garments subsequently
flooded the market, and appeared overnight in shopping malls,
boutiques, and clothing wholesale markets. Many small tailor
shops also popped up to join in this trend, purveying custom-made
traditional-style clothes.
Shan Huifang, vice secretary-general of the China Textiles
Industry Association, commented: "The popularity of traditional-style
clothes can largely be attributed to their becoming increasingly
fashionable."
Traditional Chinese garments are a cultural carryover from
China's 2000-year-old agricultural society. In the 1920s and
30s, their design was, under the influence of Western culture,
modified to accentuate feminine curves in a subtle way. Having
short-sleeves and a thigh-high split, the qipao exposes the
forearms and legs, and outlines the curves of the bust, waist
and hips. In the process of China's modernization, however,
this traditional garment seemed too out of time. Its design,
color and incompatibility with the fast tempo of modern life
precluded it from being fashionable.
It was Gong Li, world famous actress of the mid-1990s, that
helped changed the pervasive old attitudes towards classical
Chinese dress. Adorned in her traditional-style gown, her
appearance at international film award ceremonies caused great
admiration. Although her low-cut, plunging neckline, bare-shouldered,
stand-up-collar gowns were an unprecedented variation from
the traditionally conservative concept of clothes worn by
Chinese women, they were widely applauded in the West, and
won Gong Li a place on the list of the world's top 50 beautiful
women. In China, however, they triggered off a hot debate
on Eastern and Western esthetics, and on attitudes towards
tradition.
In recent years, this dispute has subsided, as people now
understand that the East and the West are not antipathetic,
and that all healthy beauty is acceptable.
Liu Mingyi, social psychologist, explains: "This is one
of the key changes in China during its 20 years of opening
up and reform. In the mid-1990s, although China had opened
its door to the outside world, its economy was still weak.
Chinese people were therefore wary of Western mores, fearing
they might undermine traditional Chinese culture. Since then,
the steady and fast growth of the Chinese economy and its
increasing prominence within the world economic framework
has given Chinese people more self-confidence and assurance
in their traditional culture. They are consequently far more
objective about and tolerant of foreign cultures."
According to a survey of September 2001, the per capita disposable
income of Chinese residents in cities and towns is 5108.4
yuan, 378.7 yuan of which is spent on clothing, as compared
with the respective 1985 figures of 739.1 and 98.04 yuan.
This increase in income has made possible an improvement in
the quality of life.
"These days, Chinese people have several outfits hanging
in their wardrobe," says Liu Min, designer at the China
Clothes Design and Research Institute. "They have learnt
to wear different clothes to suit various occasions, to match
colors and fabrics, and to pay more attention to design. But
before 1995, factors such as these were deemed an extravagance
by the majority."
People now want clothes that do not merely cover their bodies,
but also express their personality, mood, and outlook. They
scour shopping centers, boutiques, and wholesale markets,
hunting for the right clothes, resisting the impulse to buy
until they find exactly what they want.
Kang Wenjun, 39, opened his clothes shop four years ago, after
his factory had closed down. Being on good terms with the
sales departments of several large garment factories, he can
sell clothes at just one third of the prices seen in shopping
malls, and make a good living. Kang's stock has always included
something for everyone, but recently his sales volume began
to slide. "Customers enter my shop in the hope of finding
something new. If they cannot find anything out of the ordinary
after three or four visits, they won't come again for a long
time." To cater to the traditional style trend, therefore,
Kang refurbished his shop in a more traditional layout. He
also employed a tailor from Shanghai, China's fashion metropolis.
Since making these changes, his custom has increased substantially,
and he has a thick pad of advance orders.
According to a survey conducted by a popular newspaper, the
people that favor traditional-style dresses are mostly of
the "Chinese middle class;" well paid, well educated,
and with overseas study or work experience, mostly in the
30-40 age range.
"I hungered for the life I saw depicted in Western films
when I was a girl. Now I have almost everything I ever dreamed
of: a spacious house, quality furniture, and a private lawn.
But I am far from content during my leisure time." Wang
Xinyi, a 33-year-old senior employee at a foreign company,
is troubled by spiritual loss, despite living a lifestyle
enviable to most Chinese people. "When I first saw a
traditional-style, loosely fitting silk gown, an image of
me, in my cozy, spacious sitting-room, wearing this dress
while sitting on my comfortable sofa, reading, with a cup
of tea at hand, sprang to mind, the whole scenario bathed
in a soft orange light of total tranquility. I bought the
dress without a second thought."
The design of traditional clothes has been much improved.
Yu Chenggen, now aged 70, and son of a tailor famous in Beijing
in the 1920-30s, complains that such clothes look better displayed
than actually worn. But he also admits that younger designers
have given traditional clothes a more refined, elegant image.
Li Dazhi, proprietor of two traditional clothes shops, insists
that he started his business out of personal interest, and
that he rejects orders for designs that are at odds with his
style concept. All the clothes on sale in his shops are designed
and made by Li and his friends. As fine arts graduates, they
have a deep understanding of traditional Chinese esthetics,
and mix skillfully classical and modern elements in their
designs. The result is something like the film, Crouching
Tiger, Hidden Dragon; one hundred-percent Chinese in foreigners'
eyes, and also exotic to the Chinese, but with a distinct
style and taste.
Li
Dazhi has a predilection for slender, fine-boned ladies of
classical grace. His designs are mostly in bright colors such
as red, yellow and pink, rather than the traditionally dark
colors. Transparent textiles and pleated materials are applied
to add a touch of vogue to his products. Such clothes best
suit girls blessed with classical physical characteristics.
In sharp contrast to the up-market clothes it sells, the decor
of Li's shop is simple and spartan. In one corner stand two
Qing Dynasty wardrobes. Their gilded patterns have faded,
but the dark red paint still has a faint sheen. In front of
the wardrobes stand a wooden table and chairs in the Qing
style. The window display is the proprietor's masterpiece:
two traditional ornamental gowns hanging beside a pair of
antiquated wooden wheels, beneath two lamps with straw-plaited
shades strewn with grass seeds.
Li's business is steady. On a good day he can sell 20 to 30
garments. Most of his customers are foreigners and their Chinese
friends and associates. Li is nevertheless troubled that his
strongly individualistic designs have been a source of complaint
from some customers, who say that in being excessively decorative,
his clothes often fail to bring comfort to the wearer. Certain
people have asked him to make alterations to suit their particular
figures, and some have even come to him with their own designs.
There are still many problems to be addressed regarding traditional-style
clothes, including how to adapt them from exclusively formal
dress to everyday wear, how to make them fit into the fast
tempo of life, and how to mix and match them with other clothes.
Such problems will inevitably influence the length of time
that traditional clothes remain in vogue.
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