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Jing Xiu Embroidery

Among the major schools of traditional Chinese embroidery, Jing Xiu
handicraft is at the risk of disappearance and has been listed as works of
China's own Intangible Cultural Heritage (a list ensuring that China's best
culture tradition is preserved and developed as well as made known to the
outside world).
Jing Xiu, also called Gongting Xiu or Gong Xiu, was originally made for the
imperial household. In Chinese, Xiu means embroidery and Jing was named after
Beijing, while Gongting or Gong refers to the royal palace occupied by the
imperial families in old China.
The history of Jing Xiu dates back to the Tang Dynasty (618-907) when special
workshops were established to produce embroidery items for the imperial
household. In the Ming (1368-1644) and Qing (1644-1911) dynasties, the style of
Jing Xiu took shape in terms of materials, handcraftsmanship, and embroidery
patterns.

Noted for the rigid standard of counted stitch, symbolic patterns, and
second-to-none skills, Jing Xiu embroidery took the lead of the Four Minor
Embroidery Schools of Qing, along with the embroideries of Lu Xiu from Shandong
Province, Bian Xiu from Henan Province, and Ou Xiu from Zhejiang Province.
Uniqueness
** Imposing Style
Jing Xiu stands out by its strong influence in the style from the imperial
qualities, an attribute that is rare in Chinese embroidery arts. The needlework
features elegant colors and grandiose images, marked by rigorous specification
on silk material, types of stitches, and design patterns. The whole piece
spreads out the smell of dignity, nobility and masculine splendors, as opposed
to the local stitch works spiced with delicacy. Although complicated in the
design, the booming composition arouses no sense of lavishness but lends itself
to aesthetic enjoyment.
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