Chinese Embroidery
Four Famous Chinese Embroidery Styles

Embroidery is a traditional Chinese craft which consists of
pulling colored threads through a background material with embroidery needles to
stitch colored patterns that have been previously designed on the ground. The
adoption of different needling methods resulted in different embroidery styles
and technique schools. Chinese embroidery had already reached a high level early
in the Qin and Han dynasties, and silk and embroidery were the main products
transported along the ancient Chinese Silk
Road. The four famous Chinese embroidery styles are the Su
embroidery of Jiangsu
Province, the Xiang embroidery of Hunan
Province, the Yue embroidery of Guangdong
Province and the Shu
embroidery of Sichuan
Province.

Su embroidery
Su embroidery has a history of over 2000 years. It was produced on a large
scale during the Song Dynasty. In the late Ming
Dynasty and early Qing
Dynasty, Shen Shou absorbed Japanese and Western fine art sand combined them
with traditional Chinese embroidery skills to create the simulated embroidery
with ray effects. In the 1930s, the irregular embroidery technique was created
in the Zhengze Girl's Vocationa1 School in Danyang. In 1957, the Embroidery
Research Institute was established in Suzhou.
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