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Travel-Bug Tales: A slice of sunshine pie.....a Floridian beach and shopping in New Jersey!

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Candy floss clouds?
Flying on a plane became an important part of out America trip as we made our way to the different states forming a triangle over the vastness of America, but looking out the plane window to see the different hues of blue when we were up high filled me with a mixed sense of awe and contentment every time. There is just something about seeing the world from so high up.....and this part of the journey was between New Jersey and Florida. We took the local budget air carrier Southwest Airline from Philadelphia Airport, and the night before we flew I was pleasantly surprised to discover that they are one of the very few budget airlines to offer a free check-in service for a maximum of two bags or travel cases. This part of the trip was mainly to spend time with family in New Jersey as well as Florida, but rest assured.....there are still some useful bits to share with you lovely darlings!


Florida.....the sunshine state!
One of the places we went to in Florida that I really need to mention is Honeymoon Island State Park in the cute town of Dunedin. As some of you who have been following may know that one of my close girlfriends Bee moved to America last year, and she settled in Florida.....so it was the perfect time to catch up with Bee over a long afternoon on the beach of Honeymoon Island! Honeymoon Island began life as a visitor's destination in pre-war 1940s as a small piece of tropical paradise for 200 newly wed couples to spend their fresh new days being smitten with each other in small beach huts facing the sea. The 50 huts lined accross the beach were literally simple wooden shelters without plumbing or electricity, but the given names such as 'Lovey', 'Dovey', 'Love Nest' and 'Love Birds' made it a memorable experience for many couples. The 200 honeymoon couples were the lucky ones who won a promotional contest that was glamorously advertised on a national magazine, even though they had to pay for their own travel expenses as well as food and had to qualify under the strict rule of being married for less than two weeks, it was still a romantic experience. But when the war came and Pear Habor was hit, Honeymoon Island's fate became less like the vision it was meant to be and by the 1970s it became part of the state park system. [Source: floridarambler.com/florida-best-beaches/honeymoon-island-florida-best-beach-dunedin/] Today it has become a popular venue for beach wedding ceremonies and day-outs at the beach for locals! It was a good choice as the weather was really hot, the sea water was clean and the sand looked nicely fluffed out like a giant beige carpet. After a lovely afternoon on the beach, we drove 10 minutes down to Dunedin town for a bite to eat. If you would like to visit or want to find out more about Honeymoon Island State Park, please click on the link: www.romantichoneymoonisland.com/abouth.html
Honeymoon Island in the 1940s (Dunedin, Florida).

A couple enjoying their honeymoon cottage on Honeymoon Island in the 1940s (Dunedin, Florida).

Back in 2012 at the Honeymoon Cafe.....

Bee and me!

Jess in her retro swimsuit.....

With Bee on Honeymoon Island beach.....

Honeymoon Island beach!

 
New Jersey.....the shopper's treasure trove!
One of the best things to do in New Jersey is definitely shopping, whether you are a designer label fan or a thrift store hunter, you are likely to find something of a bargain to take home. One of the things I could not get use to was the constant calculation of tax or tip whenever it came to paying for something in America, as many of you might know maths is definitely not one of my strengths and I am far too spoilt in always following price tags.....unless I am bargaining in a market somewhere as that would be a completely different matter and most likely a topic for a different post. So I did enjoy shopping more when it was less complicated and I only had to remember a simple rule; necessities such as food, clothes and shoes are tax free in the state of New Jersey!  So this is what I have discovered from my shopping excursions....American brands that Brits are likely to find a few bargains from, after the exchange rate in the clothes and shoes tax free haven of New Jersey, include Mini Tonka, Nine West, Clinique and Chinese Laundry. Also outlets such as Marshalls, Ross and TJ Maxx are definitely worth a rummage if you happen to be a fan of designer labels! Other things worth a try shall be little food treats.....from fluffy giant pancakes, chewy dough pretzels, sweet butter popcorn, pretzel centred M&Ms, salt water taffy, strawberry Philadelphia spread with bagel and peanut butter coated pretzel biscuits!
Enticed by American pretzels......couldn't get enough of them!



Discovering ballerina statues made me miss my ballet class......

A real wooden American home! ^_^

Bag collection at a thrift store in New Jersey.....

Cadbury tins at the thrift store.....
With our tummies filled with all sorts of naughty treats from fast food variations to pretzels, our suitcase packed with a bounty of shopping, and hearts warmed with lots of hugs as well as memories from my aunties, uncles and cousins in America, we were ready to go home. And so concludes our American trip this time.....I hope you have enjoyed the journey too. In other news.......'Walking In May' now has a Facebook Page.....and I aim to keep it updated more frequently with some Vintage inspiration as well as some craft project I am trying my hands on, so please do take a moment to 'Like' the page: www.facebook.com/walking.in.may.blogspot
Thank you so much and have a fabulous weekend my lovely darlings!



Until the next time,
May xx

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My America trip napkin.....charting the triangle of a journey we have taken this time!


London Hot-spots: Afternoon Tea at Number Twelve.....the Ambassador Hotel (London)!

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Watching celebrity chef Heston Blumenthal perform one of his famous scientific experiments on the traditional British tea break in the dainty English town of Darwen the other night made me grin. Firstly it reinforced tea drinking as being something quintessentially British, secondly he managed to scientifically prove that the British old preference for dunking biscuits into tea does indeed make it taste more biscuit-y in a delicious sort of way, and most importantly it was a fascinating hour spent seeing the workings of the PG Tips factory that tantalised my undying love for tea even further! Perhaps it is also because of my Chinese heritage that I have a special affinity and fondness of tea, after all tea did begin its journey in China a great many moons ago, but one thing I am sure of.....is the importance of a good cup (or two) of tea in my every day life. In Heston's words, 'we are a nation fueled by tea', and this has certainly been true in the sense of tea being enjoyed as a favourite hot drink in Britain for more than 350 years.....plus tea was considered so important as a daily essential capable of keeping the British fighting spirit high throughout both world wars that the government made efforts to keep tea affordable and available to the whole country. [To find out more about what happened in Heston Blumenthal's Channel 4 programme 'Fantastical Food' on the British tea break in Darwen, please click on the link: www.lancashiretelegraph.co.uk/news/darwen/9829592.Heston_brews_up_big_style_in_Darwen] Needless to say I felt like another cup of tea after watching the programme and would have wielded to desire if it was not so close to bedtime, but it also reminded me of my recent Afternoon Tea excursion when Judita came to visit a few weeks ago. [To find out more about the origins and history of tea as well as Afternoon Tea, please click on the UK Tea Council link: www.tea.co.uk/page.php?id=47] There is nothing like a good cup of tea to prepare myself for the day ahead, to help endure a bad day or even make me smile when I feel my worst whilst being plagued by the grotty cold I have at the moment.....then there are those marvellous days where I can sit chatting away with just a cup of tea in my hand. This is why the traditional Afternoon Tea is a particular joy that I could easily accommodate at every opportunity and love sharing with my dearest friends.....you are probably considering why I haven't written much about afternoon teas before or why in this instance I have decided to go to tea with a massive beehive! For you lovely darling who have been following, you might remember my recent mini-beehive post in New York that I was a little disappointed with, so I decided to re-do a 1960s inspired beehive look and a days out in London with Judita seemed like the perfect excuse......
[To find out why biscuits taste better when dunked into tea and how Heston proved it, please click on the link: www.mirror.co.uk/tv/tv-news/heston-blumenthals-fantastical-food-chef-1418472]

Tea, tea, tea! I love a good cup of tea!

Afternoon Tea at Number Twelve, Ambassador Hotel (London).

Mmmm.....which treat should I have first?

Daydreaming in a cup of tea!


Dress: ASOS Peplum Dress
Boots: Chinese Laundry
Cardigan: Zara (past season)
Coat: Matalan (past season)
Accessories: Earrings from Forever 21





Afternoon Tea with Judita at Number Twelve, Ambassador Hotel (London).

Arriving an hour earlier than the traditional four o'clock in the afternoon at Number Twelve, which was almost 5 minutes just down the road from King's Cross Station, the feeling of being in a modern glass caged cafe jumps out at me as soon as we entered the double glass doors of the restaurant adjoining Ambassador Hotel. In the midst of the old strict builds of central London, the Ambassador Hotel seems to blend in with the distinctively beautiful old styled buildings, but indoors at Number Twelve it opened up in the air of modernity with crisp white linen tablecloths, sassy red leather-like chairs and sophisticated dark brown wooden cladding that somehow made me think of the 60s.....and funny enough it was not because I had a massive beehive on my head. We were swiftly seated by the courteous staff, who then brought us a tray with a selection of pretty fabric tea bags to choose from, and shortly after snapping some photos on my camera our toasty warm scones arrived with the rest of the goodies in a rather modern metal and plastic ensemble of a cake stand. As our tea brewed in its invisible glass bath, we started straight on the lovely scones.....I must say the combination of a hot fluffy scone with slightly crispy edges and melting clotted cream with sweet strawberry compote is absolutely, divinely, yummy! The sandwiches from cucumber to pink salmon filling and custard fruit tarts were nice, though nothing out of the ordinary.....but even with some lovely tea the pink frosted cupcakes were disappointingly soggy and tasted like vegetable oil for some strange reason. As the rain tapped on the glass ceiling and our pots of teas were refilled, I felt content to watch the day pass with flowing chatter about all and everything that crossed our minds. Perhaps this is why afternoon tea gained in popularity through the years gone by.....it might have begun as a high society affair where ladies sat in their opulent drawing rooms to receive other ladies clad in their finest gowns for a spot of tea and cake, but the crux of it all really is the opportunity to sit down together for a real face to face conversation with a friend. With the lovely scones and tea as well as the warm waiting staff, Number Twelve respectably gathered ♥♥♥ out of 5 lovely hearts from me for our afternoon tea excursion. 

So next time you happen to stop by in London, do have a pleasant afternoon tea! Just in case you might want to know more.....here is tea specialist Margot from the famous Fortnum and Mason (who have been in the tea business since 1707), briefly explaining the origin as well as importance of the customarily British afternoon tea:
 *Fortnum & Mason afternoon tea video link:
www.fortnumandmason.com/c-380-the-origins-of-afternoon-tea-fortnum-and-mason.aspx

And also Fortnum and Mason's How-To brew the perfect cup of tea video link:
www.fortnumandmason.com/c-46-the-perfect-cup-of-tea-fortnum-and-mason.aspx


Taking a walk near St Pancras Station.......



"London's calling!"

One for the Harry Potter fans; "Welcome on Platform 9 and 3/4!" (King's Cross Station, London)

Judita at King's Cross Station, London.
Hopefully you have enjoyed my little Afternoon Tea excursion with Judita and like my 60s inspired beehive look! There will be more to post about my travels to Portugal as well as an exciting new series of posts I am planning for the Qi Pao (Chinese Cheongsam).......and also an idea or two that might make my blog a little bit different the next time you drop by. Also please, please, please do drop by at the Walking In May Facebook page to find out more, as it is updated almost every day with some Vintage inspiration as well as what I have been up to:
Last but not least.....a massive THANK YOU to all you wonderful darlings for your continued support, beautiful comments and love of 'Walking In May'.....as well as a warm 'Hello' to the new followers. Have a fabulous Sunday my darlings!


Until the next time,
May xx

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Please don't get lost...it's a cyber home move!

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Hello my fabulous darlings! Just a quick note to share some news that I have been quite excited about.......my blog 'Walking In May' is dropping the blogspot address to become walkinginmay.com very soon! Hopefully this change (fingers crossed) in cyber home will help me bring you a better and more permanent blog, so please, please, please, don't get lost and do continue to drop by at 'Walking In May'. In the meantime, the Walking In May Facebook Page will be kept up to date with any details of the move, and I shall still continue writing new posts to publish throughout the transition period. Thank you so so much for your continued support, including every new 'Like' on the Facebook Page as well as Twitter and Google follow.......have a fabulous weekend my lovely darlings!



Until the next time,
May xx

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Travel-bug Tales: In search of Nata Tarts in Albufeira (Portugal)!

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Hello and welcome back my lovely darlings! Whilst my blogspot blog is still undergoing the rather complex custom domain transition to become WalkingInMay.com I have decided to continue with posts writing as usual.....and in an unexpected fashion it happens to be another travel post as I am yet to disclose all on my little trip to Portugal (after the 3week American series). I have always wanted to visit Portugal actually, but unlike other people of sensible minds, my reason was not mainly the beach or the weather.....it was because of my love for Eggtarts and that the Portuguese version of the custard Nata tart was something I just had to try! So when my lovely friend Judita asked where we should go for a holiday this year, I decided to put Portugal on the list of possibilities and luckily enough we found a brilliant deal.....so Portugal it was! Following the advice of another kind friend we finally booked in the Albufeira area, and since it was October we also crossed our fingers to hope for good sunny weather during our 5 days adventure. For those who have been following my blog for a while, you might remember the trip I took with Judita to Montpellier last year and how we stayed with the amazing fellow blogger Olivia! [To catch up on the Montpellier adventure we had last year, please click here: walkinginmay.blogspot.co.uk/2011/12/eating-our-way-montpellier]


The church near the town centre....Albufeira, Portugal.
Getting from Faro Airport to Albufeira was a more complicated process than we thought, eventhough it should have only been about one hour and a half away and we had already done our homework by booking a transfer service online with a website called Resorthoppa. On the booking documents we were informed that there may be a wait at the airport after making contact with their representative but it should not exceed 45 minutes before we would leave the airport to be on our shared shuttle journey towards Albufeira. The reality was far from the promised version.....after an hour waiting in the airport we were led to an old coach bus in the carpark, but the wait on the un-moving bus continued for almost 3 hours with a driver who spoke "No English" as a reply to all questions from an entire bus of English speaking passengers, and no representatives were in sight.....to which by that time we realised we were waiting until the last flight had arrived so that the bus could be filled to the max and other forms of public transport have ended services. Surely that was not the ideal way to begin a holiday, but the challenge did not end there.....the bus finally did move and drove an hour into Albufeira through the darkness, only for us to be alerted by another fellow Brit who has visited Albufeira before that we were actually going around the city in circles. For some unknown reason to us, the driver had the journey of hotels alphabetically mapped out in a list and passengers were being dropped off according to his listed system.....which did not make much sense to us or the other sleepy passengers who also seemed to be in a daze. After another hour of circling the town and the driver not seeming to understand our protest, a fellow passenger decided to confront the driver by chasing him off and around the bus for a while during one of the stops. Being unfruitful in confrontation both men scurried back on for the bus to continue the long circling process again, and shortly after a woman screamed at the driver to let her as well as her two young children off in the middle of not knowing where.....so by the time we reached out hotel it was past 3am and we were utterly exhausted as well as shocked that we were indeed still within Europe. Judita was very impressed by how tolerant us Brits can be even in difficult situations and I made a mental note to complain once I got back to London, then we both drifted off to sleep.

Tea in the "Openada" cafe overlooking the sea.....Albufeira, Portugal.
Our first full day in Albufeira was draped in rain, so most of it was spent inside cafes with a book, the view of the rushing sea and a pot of warm tea to keep us entertained. We soon discovered that the city has been transformed into a British tourist destination with most food and drink tailored to British preferences.....English tea, chips, cheese toasties, sandwiches, pizzas and burgers were the identical items on almost every restaurant or cafe we went to! We almost felt brave to try whole calamari, grilled fish, roasted pork with spices and peri-peri chicken.....so there are a few places I can recommend if you ever drop by in Albufeira. The "Openada" cafe is a lovely little place on a secluded street after you have taken the lift up from the beach, where you can watch the waves roll in from a beautiful height and enjoy a cup of tea with a book or some chatter.....staff are relaxed, friendly and accommodatingly nice (photo above). Then there is "Baillott" restaurant near the main street, which has free wifi access, reasonably priced food and entertaining waiters who made us laugh whilst waiting for the food.

The cliffs near the beach.....Albufeira, Portugal.

A platform to watch the sea.....Albufeira, Portugal.

We loved all the beautiful tiled artwork on the buildings.....Albufeira, Portugal.

Watching the clouds on the beach.....Albufeira, Portugal.
The next day, still fearful for the wet and cold autumn, I was prepared with my thick coat and knowingly committed the big fashion sin of wearing tights under my summer sandals.....having packed my luggage more for sunshine than rain it was a compromise I had to make. Though still chilly with strong winds, we had a lucky day of sunshine on the beach and I even discovered how tights can be extremely efficient as a secret weapon to keep your feet utterly sand free! Jumping around in the sand, sitting in the sunshine to watch the sea roar gloriously aloud and having a sweet treat of Nata tarts as well as ice cream, we had a relaxing bit of heaven on earth right there in Albufeira. In the evening, after a dinner of salad, sticky buffalo wings and a glass of famous Portuguese red Port, we took a walk through the sea facing town and as we browsed we were suddenly surprised by a man on a balcony shouting out declarations of love to us.....like girls returning to the days of their youth we waved at him with a glance, turned away and raced down the street giggling our heads off. The following days were filled with a mixture of sunny and rainy weather, so we gratefully spent our time reading on the beach, walking in the rain, eating Nata tarts, drinking tea and watching the sea.

Ta-da! Albufeira town on a sunnier October day.....Portugal.

Flowing in the sand  of time.....Albufeira, Portugal.

Pretending to be the ice cream Liberty Lady.....Albufeira, Portugal.

On the beach for some sun.....Albufeira, Portugal.
One last place to mention is a restaurant called "Altrium" near the main street.....with a small entrance leading up the staircase we entered a rather grand room with tiled artwork, shiny chandeliers, marble columns, decorated ceiling and glass windowed balconies overlooking the street. The food menu was longer than most other restaurants with a wider selection of local fish or seafood, and though the prices were a little higher, it was certainly a good and tasty dinner. As you can probably tell from the photos (below) it was closer to a fine dining experience, the waiters were politely courteous as well as attentive and on certain days of the week they even have a traditional Portuguese band playing on the old wooden stage.

At the beautiful dining room of "Altrium" restaurant.....Albufeira, Portugal.

"Altrium" restaurant with a stage for traditional Portuguese bands to perform...Albufeira.

Munching on a high chicken kebab in Altrium restaurant.....Albufeira, Portugal.

A sand sculpted display in the town centre.....Albufeira, Portugal.

The famous Portuguese custard Nata Tart at our favourite breakfast bakery by the church...Albufeira, Portugal.

Ah...caught by the cold sea water! (Albufeira, Portugal)

Judita and me at the beach.....Albufeira, Portugal.
All in all we had a lovely October break by the sea, which left us wondering where we might have another adventure next year! Before Judita had to return to Vienna, we also had a few days in London to do some shopping and have English as well as Chinese afternoon tea. Now that Christmas is drawing closer, thoughts of presents and putting up the tree becomes more vivid.....also my excitement for the series of Qipao posts soon to come and the fruits of collaboration with some photographers that will be revealed in time. Are you lovely darlings all ready to put up your tree and welcome the New Year? Whatever you might be up to.....have a fabulous weekend my lovely darlings!


Until the next time,
May xx

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Happy Blog Birthday...and the "One Lovely Blog" Award!

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The 'One Lovely Blog' Award from Wendy at the Butterfly Balcony (2012).

I must start by apologising as this receiving blog post is long...long overdue! My deep thank you goes to the lovely Wendy from the Butterfly Balcony [You can find Wendy's blog here: thebutterflybalcony.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/blog-award-even-more-random-facts-about] for giving me this "One Lovely Blog" Award a few months ago. Wendy is such a lovely blogger, talented dressmaker and a real joy to know, so please do drop by at her beautiful blog! Now for the nitty gritty bit that I often struggle with...the 7 random facts about me:

  1. Being so much in love with the Chinese dress know as the Qipao (or Cheongsam) and having enjoyed collecting it as well as wearing it every year, but also loving a good cup of tea and vintage styles.....I started dreaming about setting up a London "Qipao Tea Club"! Wouldn't it be utterly fabulous if all the ladies who loved this dress could gather together at a tea party in their beautiful Qipao dresses every now and then, perhaps with a vintage hairstyle or glamorous accessories to match, to have a bit of cake as well as tea and dancing? Just thinking about it is getting me ever so excited...and very soon, probably in the next week or so, you are likely to hear me banging on about almost everything on the Qipao when I start my "Qipao Love (All About Qipao)" series of posts!   
  2. I absolutely adore cats and have gone as far to try clicker training my handsome boy BouBou.....partly because I found out that is how they train the lions at the London Zoo and also because I wanted him to be able to come when he is called in case of a house fire. We haven't got very far in training, but result is that BouBou actually does answer to his name and every time he hears his name being mentioned he always turns around to look at the caller with a chirrup!
  3. You probably won't have noticed but I tend not to wear any blush when I do my make-up, as my rosy cheeks are prone to turning tomato red with any influence of laughter, dance or alcohol!
  4. I have recently started to learn embroidery of the freestyle silk shading type recently...and am surprised to say that I have become quite addicted to embroidery! Who would have thought that stitching could become so relaxing and addictive, especially for a poorly skilled needle-worker like me!
  5. On the subject of needles.....I am actually terrified of injections and blood tests because of the needled syringe and have to resist fainting at the sight of blood oozing, though strangely somehow I can cope with handling the sewing needle for embroidery.
  6. My favourite must sing songs whenever we go for karaoke are 'Don't cry for me Argentina' from Evita and 'Hero' by Mariah Carey.
  7. I also love musicals and ballet.....the most recent musical I saw was 'Singing In the Rain' where Spice Girl Geri Halliwell made a special appearance for the 'Children In Need' charity! I must say I loved the Gene Kelly movie set in Hollywood's glamorous 1929 when sound began taking over silent  movies, and I was not disappointed by the musical either...even with the overly shriek-y Lina Lamont character in the musical...so its definitely worth a fun evening out with friends, loved ones and family!
'Singin in the Rain' in London (2012).
Here's the original movie 'Singin in the Rain' with an absolutely charming Gene Kelly performing this favourite musical number:


Going to see 'Singin in the Rain' in London (2012).....
Now to pass on the baton.....I would like to pass on this "One Lovely Blog" Award to the following utterly lovely and even much much more amazing blogs than Walking In May, to show my appreciation of how truly lovely these blogs are:
Jessica at the ChronicallyVintage.com 
Lynn at the HeartedGirl.com 
Bethany at the GlamorousHousewife.com 
Sara at the Ladylike Delicacy 
Mitha Komala at the Letters to Juliet
If you fabulous ladies should choose to blog about this award, then please do put up the "One Lovely Blog" Award stamp (picture) on your blog, mention 7 random facts about yourself and pass it on to 10 or as many lovely blogs as you wish!
My handsome boy BouBou...who is also very lovely! x
Last but not in the very least is a little bit of news.......my blog Walking In May is actually 2 years old today.....so it is a Happy Blog BirthDay!! We have also just put up our Christmas tree a few days ago, have you put up your tree yet? Here's hoping all you lovely darlings have had a lovely week so far and will have a fabulous weekend!



Until the next time,
May xx

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Qipao Love: Part 1~ From Qi Pao to Cheongsam.....an evolution of a dress about women!

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Welcome my lovely darlings to the new address www.WalkingInMay.com as the blogspot to custom domain transition is now officially completed! Worry not, if you are still using the walkinginmay.blogspot.co.uk address it should automatically divert to my blog www.walkinginmay.com and there is also a new e-mail address if you should like to drop me a line to say hello or ask any questions; may@walkinginmay.com! What better way to celebrate this transition than to start on one of my favourite topics.....and you can probably tell how excited I am with all the exclamation marks I am over using.....so without further ado, I shall begin with Part One of my "Qipao Love (All about Qipao)" series of posts!

Throughout my blog, and over the two years, I have mentioned the Chinese Qipao dress (also known as Cheongsam in Cantonese) quite a few times, especially during the run-up to Chinese New Year. Having a self confessed love of the Qipao, as some of you darlings who have been following may know, I can usually be spotted wearing the Qipao throughout the 15 days of Chinese New Year festivities and have been adding one or two new Qipao dresses to my collection every year in following with the Chinese 'something new to wear for the new year' tradition. I know you must be thinking it is probably the best excuse to buy a new dress...yes I must admit to that, but the truth of the matter is that the Qipao really is more than a dress or costume to me. The Qipao can be an exquisite work of art that embodies a great deal of beauty, passion and love, but it is also an old art that is at risk of disappearing one day. Why do I say so when the Qipao has been reappearing on runways from time to time and is now mass produced to be imported around the world? Well...if you know the history, why it has evolved through time and how much skill is required to make such a dress, then you will understand why. Please allow me to begin with an introdution of how the Qipao evolved...so let's begin with a brief overview from a video I found on Youtube and an illustration of the Qipao dress' transformation from a Hong Kong exhibition:
[Video link: www.youtube.com/watch?v=pOo3xR-yOMU]

Following the dress from the 1920s through changing times...from the 'Transformation of the Qipao' exhibition, Hong Kong (2012).
Source: http://www.fashionally.com/flash.php?id=48 




Dressing in a Qipao through changing times
The Qipao (in Mandarin and literally means 'banner robe')  is indeed a resilient dress that has endured more than 300 years of life, but most interesting is the fact that it has been a very adaptable dress, capable of living up to modernity and yet not appearing to be easily dated in specific eras. Whether you are wearing a vintage Qipao or a newly custom made Qipao, it is difficult to tell what period of time it was made unless you happen to be a tailor and an expert at fabric as well as textiles history. Since covering a whole 300 years may be too tricky and risk boring everyone to slumber, I have decided to use photos of the Qipao from different periods of time to briefly capture the evolution of this beautiful dress...and to demonstrate how an old vintage Qipao can just as well be worn today! Because it really is a dress about women, but most of all it is a dress that celebrates and enshrines the simple beauty of the female form. Let us begin from:


~The Qing Dynasty (1644-1912)...
The roots of the Qipao can be traced to the identity of different noble clans who held power as well as wealth during the Qing dynasty, because the Mandarin term "Qi Pao" (Banner Robe) was used to describe the long dress worn by women belonging to the Eight Banners (clans) of Manchu. It was a long A-shaped, loosely fitted and squarely cut silk brocade robe adorned with different embroidered motifs that reflected the status, position or title of nobility the wearer held, and was usually worn over several layers of silk under-dress (as you can probably tell from the layered sleeves in the photo). The slight variation in styles in different regions, the choice of silk brocades from different fabric weavers and being entirely custom made, has propelled the Qipao to an early notion of fashion in China. 
Qing Dynasty...Manchu noblewoman Lady Heseri during the Guangxu period (1875-1908)
Source: Wikipedia

Qing Dynasty...Manchu noblewoman Lady Aixingioro Hengxiang during the Guangxu period (1875-1908)
Source: Wikipedia



~The 1920s...
As the Qing dynasty fell and the world began to flap to the roaring twenties, the Chinese Qipao began changing to keep up with the fashion of the time. In the early 1920s, the length of the hem was shorten up to the ankle and the sleeves stopped a little below the elbow as it became more acceptable to reveal the feet and lower arm. Western influences appeared in the form of imported fabric, but details such as material type, embroidery and clasps still could reflect the wearer's social status or background. As the 1920s progressed, the Qipao became more fitted at the waist to better encapsulate the female form, the number of silk under-dresses fell and varieties were made for different occasions from parties to daily wear. The more glamorous ladies took to wearing Western Marcel Waves (finger waves), Art Deco styled jewellery, pearls, cardigans, capes or shrugs with the Qipao...as you can probably see from the photo (below) of Imperial Concubine Xiang (1913-1949).  
Republican period...Imperial Concubine Xiang (1913-1949)
Source: Wikipedia 

Last monarch of the Qing Dynasty....Empress Wanrong and Emperor Puyi
Source


Famous silent film actress Hu Die (Source)




~The Golden Age of 1930s...
The well fitted and glamorously modernised Qipao was firmly established by the 1930s, with girls following trends and establishing personal styles through the influence of famous singers, actresses or beautiful calendar girls who were the models of the time. Features such as the high side slits and shorter sleeves became more pronounced like a statement of the dress, but the length became floor draping and long enough to cover the feet again. The Qipao quickly became the most popular and fashionable choice of clothing for Chinese women who opted to combine it with Western high heeled shoes and natural coloured tights or stockings.

Vintage Qipao from the 1930s (Source)

Famous silent film actress Hu Die (Source)


Famous actress and singer Zhou Xuan (1920-1957)
Source


~The 1940s...
The golden age of the Qipao continued as it remained highly popular and at the height of fashion throughout the 1940s, especially in glamorous cities such as Shanghai which was known as the pearl of the East and labelled the Paris of Asia. Calendars with beautifully painted female models in Qipao dresses graced the walls of most homes, advertising products, depicting the most fashionable styles in Vogue and continued to fuel the Qipao's popularity. But when the war hit, fashion came to a halt and people fled for their lives.
1941: Chinese American author Li Ling-Ai arrives in Los Angeles for  the premiere of KUKAN.
(http://pinterest.com/robinlung/ode-to-the-cheongsam-and-qipao/)

Vintage Qipao dresses dated  1946-1956. (Source)

Painted calendar girl in Qipao advertising products...
Source




~The 1950s...
After the war the People's Republic of China was formed, the Qipao was gradually phased out in the mainland for its ideological links and many Qipao tailors fled the country. But the Qipao was still worn by Chinese ladies overseas in places such as Malaysia, Singapore and especially Hong Kong; where many Shanghai Qipao tailors had fled to. Hong Kong prospered in the 1950s and Qipao was the chosen daily wear of most women, so the custom made Qipao became a booming trade! The well skilled tailors in Hong Kong led the Qipao fashion by incorporating more Western styles into the Qipao, such as the shorter tapered hem to echo the fashionable pencil skirts of the time, front as well as back waist darts (seams) to create a tighter hour glass silhouette, higher side slits to ease movement and a functional zip to make the Qipao easier to wear.
1954 Hong Kong: Clark Gable with Li Li-Hwa in a elegantly simple but fitted hour glass Qipao.
(http://pinterest.com/robinlung/ode-to-the-cheongsam-and-qipao/)
Early 1950s outside the Capitol Record building in Los Angeles......
Source



~The 1960s...
The emergence of the 60s mini skirt led tailors to create a mini short length Qipao which created public outrage in Hong Kong and a proper dress movement was formed in protest, so many girls opted for the midi Qipao which ended just below the knee. Geographical differences also led to the Cantonese name of Cheongsam being used more often, and cultural fusions enabled the Qipao to be tailor made with local wax painted or dyed Batik fabric in places like Singapore and Malaysia. [To find out more about Batik fabric and prints, please click here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batik] The Qipao gradually became occasional wear, rather than daily wear, as more Western forms of clothing were adopted in different places.

Yu Ming and Lin Dai from 1950s to 1964

Famous singer Zhang Xue Fang (Record cover in 1962)
Source




~The 1970s onwards...
From the 1970s the Qipao firmly became an occasional dress used for special events such as weddings, beauty pageants, parties and Chinese New Year festivities, but it was also adopted as uniform in some schools and restaurants.

Reaching Modernity: Silk and fur Qipao designed by John Galliano for Christian Dior Fall 1997.
(Book: In the mood for Cheongsam; Modernity and Singapore Women, 2012)

The evolution of fashion in 1930s Shanghai.....consisted of a mix in Eastern and Western clothing, but the Qipao became the iconic leading trend and evidence of high fashion at the time.
Source: http://thefashionhandsthecity.blogspot.co.uk/# 

Famous silent film actress Anna May Wong (1920s) to writer Eileen Chang (1940s)
Source



The Qipao today
With recent increased appearance of the Qipao in movies such as 'In the Mood for Love', the Qipao has reappeared under the spotlight once again. Though how the Qipao is worn depends highly on personal style and preferences, it still remains a beautifully timeless dress...which I often find a pity to reserve solely for special occasions and festivities. To demonstrate a little glimpse of what I mean, here is Part ONE of the documentary following the evolution of the Chinese Qipao to modern times by China's international television chanel CCTV:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=kw5TS3SY63Q&feature=related

Part TWO of the Chinese Qipao documentary:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Zd5LQjp8snw&feature=relmfu

Part THREE of the Chinese Qipao documentary:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ijo2Rgq26Nw&feature=relmfu


The stark contrast between the loose school uniform Qipao and the glamorously fitted sing-song girls' Qipao dresses of war-torn Nanjing 1937...in the film 'Flowers of War' (2011).
Source: http://reviewspp.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/the-flowers-of-war.html


Personally, I have always preferred the Mandarin name Qipao, as I find it a more fitting name to describe a beautiful dress that has been draped with such richness in history and endured such heavy changes through time. Call her by her different names if you wish.....Qipao, Cheongsam, Chinese dress or dress of cultural identity.....she is simply a dress that is about the woman inside and a frame of her true beauty. I hope Part One of the Qipao Love (All about Qipao) series has helped you lovely darlings discover a little bit more about this unique dress, and perhaps intrigue you enough to try it one day! Here's wishing all you lovely darlings a fabulously merry weekend!


Until the next time,
May xx

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Source:

  • Hong Kong Museum of History: www.lcsd.gov.hk/ce/Museum/History/en/ex_special_qp_mar10.php 
  • 'Changing clothes in China: Fashion, History, Nation' by Antonia Finnane
  • 'The meaning of Qipao as traditional dress' by Chui Chu Yang
  • 'In the Mood for Cheongsam: A social history, 1920s-Present' by Lee Chor Lin and Chung May Khuen

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

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Just a quick note...to wish you lovely darlings a 
Merry Christmas 
and 
fabulously Happy New Year 2013! 



Until the next time,
May (and BouBou) xx

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Qipao Love: Part 2 ~The flapper girl in a Qipao who captured the West.....Anna May Wong!

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Source: lolitasclassics.blogspot.co.uk/2009/08/anna-may-wong
I am not the first to write about the captivating beauty that is Anna May Wong, and I most definitely will not be the last, which is why I have decided to focus this post on what I found interesting about her life rather than a full biography. As I searched through the world wide web to find more information and photographs of her, I was especially struck with the cigarette cards (left and further below) which depicted her in a mandarin collared Qipao and described her as a modern beauty. In the age which she lived, she was indeed strikingly beautiful and carved a path of modernity for herself. Being the very first American Asian actress to succeed in making an impact in Hollywood during the silent film era by having more than 80 films to her name and received such global fame that her audience kept asking for more, she was not just another Asian beauty...she was a star in the eyes of her admirers, and to me she was a glamorous siren who introduced the Qipao to the West (hence the post title and why it is Part Two of the Qipao Love series)!

[If you would like to read a full biography of Anna May Wong on Wikipedia, please click here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_May_Wong]  

The dragon gown designed by Travis Benton for her role of Tu Tuan in Limehouse Blues (1934).
www.elle.com/fashion/spotlight/spring-forward-your-ultimate-trend-shopping-guide-559280-2#slide-2 
Anna May Wong was born as 'Frosted Willow' (pronounced Liu Shuang in Mandarin or Liu Tsong in Cantonese) on 3 January 1905 to second generation American Chinese parents, on nearby Chinatown's Flower Street in Los Angeles, and still planned to film the 'Flower Drum Song' before she passed away on 3 February 1961 at the age of 56 years. For you darlings who may know a little about the Chinese culture, you might know that a Chinese name can often reflect one's family background as well as the hopes of the parents for the child, which is why Chinese names are often symbolic and poetic. Like the delicate willow that danced beautifully in the wind but still remains strongly upright and rooted, Anna May Wong was a courageous child who found her passion in film at a tender age of 9 years old and started begging filmmakers who were filming nearby to give her a part in the movie. She was a daughter of a second wife, one amongst six other siblings and her father disapproved of her ambitions for film, but strongly determined to become an actress she obtained her first lead role as Lotus Flower in the Technicolour movie 'The Toll of the Sea' by the age of 17 years.


Link: http://redressingblog.blogspot.co.uk/2012/02/fab-frock-friday-cheongsam-dresses.html 
Though Anna May Wong had the charismatic qualities of a leading lady for a variety of roles that could have been perfect for her and was highly praised by critics as well as audiences, she was not to be more than a stereotyped supporting act. Like a bright star waiting for her night to shine, she was frustrated as an American who was treated a foreigner in her own home and cultivated a daring image as a flapper in hope to change things. Moving to Europe her talents were recognised as well as highly praised and Europe was falling in love with her, but she was still seen as an exotic Chinese beauty as audiences forgot all about her American birth. But on another more positive note, Anna May Wong became one of the most fashionable ladies of the decade when the Mayfair Mannequin Society of New York named her the 'World's Best-Dressed Woman' in 1934 and Look magazine named her the 'World's Most Beautiful Chinese Girl' in 1938. She struggled to break through biases learning different languages as well as cultures and travelling to China as well as Europe, though sadly the breakthrough she sought did not result and she was plagued by depression...she did gain in theatrical skills, continued fame for the work she did as well as the causes she fought to make things better for others and accumulated a beautiful collection of Qipao dresses. Below is a clip (thanks to Dave at the 'Soft Film: Vintage Chinese Cinema' blog) from the Technicolour short film 'Hollywood Party' (1937), where you will be able to see Anna May Wong sporting the British accent she learnt whilst in Europe and modelling some lovely full length Qipao dresses:


 Video link for 'The Incomparable Wong Liu Tsong in Technicolor':
www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=OHO4IrtDlLE

Link: http://theatreoffashion.co.uk/2011/10/18/ready-for-my-close-up-anna-may-wong/ 

Link: http://keijing.com/2012/08/31/anna-may-wong/ 

Shanghai Express (1932)
http://www.answers.com/topic/anna-may-wong


Source: http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2010/02/28/dead-cool-anna-may-wong.html?cid=bs:archive4 

Source: http://pinterest.com/pin/235876099203956452/ 
Anna May Wong was also seen wearing the Qipao in a video from the Anna May Wong Society showing her travels around China in 1936 (below). The narrator explains how she was greeted by the press, was able to learn Mandarin in her short visit (as she only spoke the Taishan dialect when she arrived), saw the real life conditions in Shanghai, visited film sets and discussed the Hollywood acting scene with local (China) famous actress Hu Die. At a time when the cinema boomed and famous actresses in China were dressed in best tailored or styled Qipao, it propelled the Qipao into one of the most popular dress of choice for Chinese ladies who wanted to be fashionable...which has most probably sparked off Anna May Wong's interest in the Qipao. Not only did she acquire some Qipao during her travels in China, Paramount Studios costume designer Travis Benton also designed Qipao dresses for her acting wardrobe...perhaps the most remembered is the black and gold dragon gown for the character of Tu Tuan in the Limehouse Blues (1934). [Video link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wuEQTMof9oI]


Source: http://pinterest.com/pin/235876099203953840/ 

The dragon gown by Travis Benton...
Source: http://leopardandlipstick.blogspot.co.uk/2011/03/anna-may-wong-first-chinese-american.html 

Garbaty's Cigarettes card, Modernschonheitsgalerie (Gallery of modern Beauty ~ c1935)
#103 Anna May Wong ~ Chinese American actress, 1905-61
http://flickriver.com/photos/44841559@N03/4477725951/




Last but not in the very least, I leave you with the song 'These Foolish Things' that was written in the 1930s for Anna May Wong (in a modern rendition by Rod Steward, video link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vsUVKmDHNcg) and a showcase of her photos. If Anna May Wong lived today, she would celebrate her next birthday soon after we enter the new year...so Happy Birthday Anna May! [Not to forget to mention...for you lovely darlings who like using Pinterest, I have been building a 'Qipao Love' board there which you can take a look through this link: pinterest.com/missmayloh/qipao-love-all-about-qipao-to-cheongsam/] I also hope you lovely darlings will have a fabulous time celebrating the beginning of 2013 with those you hold dear...may it be a year blessed with lots of happiness and love for all...Happy New Year 2013 my darlings!



Until the next time,
May xx

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PS: If you would like to find out more about Anna May Wong, these articles may be of interest:


LookS: Qipao Love ~ Part 3...my 1920s inspired Qipao look!

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Happy 2013 my fabulous darlings...and welcome back to 'Walking In May' on this brand new year! I trust that you have all had a lovely Christmas season and apologize for the delay in completing this post...there were just far too many lovely photos to choose from for my 1920s inspired Qipao (Cheongsam) look taken by brilliant photographer Timothy Ward, and so so much I wanted to cover in this one post that editing took a while!

[To find out more about creative professional Timothy Ward's photography and filming work, please click on the links: 

I have always enjoyed and welcomed collaborations with creative minds...having planned this 1920s inspired Qipao look in detail and with much thought, I really wanted to capture the feeling of the roaring 20s within the look as well as photographs...so a day photoshoot in the historical Greenwich (London) with creative professional Timothy Ward was just brilliant! Having set my hair in a wide Marcel-like wave the night before, waking up early to do my hair as well as make up, and unknowingly chosen (probably) one of the coldest days of December to be in the windy Greenwich grounds right by the river, I was almost ready to burst into panic when announcements of train delays poured through the train station speakers whilst I was trying to buy a ticket from a faulty machine. A man kindly approached me to say; "Excuse me madam, I think  this machine is not working...you might want to try another one", and I suddenly stopped wrestling with the machine to thank him, realising I have just been addressed as 'madam' by an absolute stranger! Then it struck me that I might have looked a little unusual or out of place with an over-sized grey faux fur coat covering bits of shiny gold brocade, pin-curled hair and pearl earrings...so I smiled and my cheeks reddened to the thought that I might have looked quite the crazed character by those who have no idea what I am trying to do...or even to those who know what I want to do! Running around the beautiful cobbled streets of old Greenwich to capture the photos we were almost frozen to the bone, Timothy started losing sense of his fingers, my nose turned pink from the frosty wind and I again realised how seemingly bizarre my love for the Qipao (as well as my blog) must seem to this newly met collaborator...especially when Timothy asked 'what made me come out on such a cold day to do a photoshoot?'  
The Mandarin collar has become a statement look of the Qipao.....



Add a broach to a cape for a little touch of sparkle.....

My elaborately beaded white purse, given to me by an old aunt many years ago...

At the Biscuit Ceramic Cafe in Greenwich, London.

Fortunately blessed by angels...at the Biscuit Ceramic Cafe in Greenwich, London.

Close up on my hair.....wave, pin-curls and knotted bun at the nape of my neck.
Taking a break from the cold roaring winds, we decided to have a cup of tea at one of my favourite cafes in Greenwich...the Biscuit Ceramic Cafe. [To find out more about the lovely Biscuit Ceramic Cafe: www.biscuit-biscuit.com] Warming up with a hot cup in hand, surrounded by cute ceramic plates hung on the colourful walls, pots of paintbrushes on the table and vintage tunes playing in the background, I told Timothy about my blog and why I love the Qipao dress so much. I explained the details of my 1920s inspired look...the significance of the ankle length Qipao, the intricate gold silken brocade, pearled earrings, white beaded purse hanging from a roped strap, the Marcel-like waved hair, the sheer stocking with visible line running from the back, the grey suede T-barred shoes and the over sized grey faux fur coat that reminds me of the opulent 20s. As you lovely darlings who have been following might know, I have always loved the 1920s and have been fascinated by the glamorous Shanghai Qipao style of the 1930s to 1940s...but I also wanted to create a wearable Qipao look that steps away from the exaggerated fancy dress party or waitress uniform stereotypes. I chose to boldly clash my simple gold full length brocade Qipao with a purple knitted cape and accessorised with only a little sparkly brooch and my crystal Marcasite watch for a reason...the 1920s was a rebirth period for the Qipao. It was then that a loosely angular traditional dress became a more fitting and glamorous garment of choice by fashionable ladies of high society...later the combination with imported Western styled garments like cardigans or shorter capes further enhanced ones sense of personal style and affluence.

[To read more about the photoshoot I did with Timothy Ward, please head over to his blog where you will  find the blog post he did and lots of brilliant photographs: timothydarylward.tumblr.com/post/38019500413/mayloh]



Reaching out at the cobbled path of old Greenwich Market, London.

The old Greenwich Market, London.

Old Greenwich Market, London.

Outside the gates of the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich, London.
Behind the Cutty Sark...the last surviving tea clipper (Greenwich, London).

Old Greenwich Market square, London.
There was really no better location to do a photoshoot of my 1920s inspired Qipao (Cheongsam) look than Greenwich...London may be considered one of the great world cities for many reasons, but to me, there is much more than just a cosmopolitan city centre that most people see. With a symphony of musicals, architecture, museums, theaters, cuisines, pubs, languages, people, rain, parks, pigeons, tailoring, royalty, history and underground system.....I often feel that there is no place like London and cannot help but love London more. Greenwich is also one of the reasons why I love London, being drawn to this old cobbled town with protected listed buildings over and over again through the years...from the old Greenwich Market square with vintage wares for sale to the vast park grounds that surround the Greenwich Meridian Line marking the centre of world time and the last surviving tea clipper that is Cutty Sark. [To find out more about visiting Greenwich and Meridian Line, please click on the links: www.visitlondon.com/things-to-do/place/450876-royal-observatory-greenwich or www.visitgreenwich.org.uk] Not to forget a place that I hold many fond memories of is the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich, where I once spent some wonderful afternoons sitting on the grass with my university classmates, watching the river and listening to the Jazz bands play whilst having our lunch under the summer breeze. I have forgotten the number of times I strolled through the Old Royal Naval College grounds, but each time seems a little different...whether I am reminded of the fact that it is the home of time, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, the background for many a famous movies, the practice domes built to a smaller scale of St. Paul's Cathedral or the birth place of Queen Mary as well as the great Tudor Queen Elizabeth I...somehow I happen to cherish it a little more.

[To find out more about the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich (London), please click on the links: www.ornc.org 

Greenwich University and the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich, London.



Birds flying high...within the Old Royal Naval College and Greenwich University grounds (right by the River Thames), London.

Watching the sky...the Old Royal Naval College and Greenwich University grounds, London.

With a frosted pink nose, I smiled in my Qipao as the wind roared on.....the Old Royal Naval College in Greenwich, London.
So the next time you darlings visit London, please do consider spending an afternoon in Greenwich and visiting the Old Royal Naval College.....which I would definitely recommend as a London Hot-Spot! Hopefully my 1920s inspired Qipao look has managed to spark some ideas of how you might want to wear and style a Qipao (Cheongsam) of your own...especially if you are attending any Chinese New Year celebrations or wish to get your very first Qipao! Though my full length gold brocade Qipao has a little bit more in detail with the extra frogged knotted buttons on the side slits and colourful weave of bamboo as well as blossoms, it is very similar to many ready made brocade Qipao dresses you can buy online or at a store...as I wanted to use a piece that was easily wearable and available to build a look that I hope I have managed to make my own. And of course, I could not have captured this look without the help of a brilliant photographer friend Timothy Ward...please do stop over at his blog or Facebook page when you get a moment as he has captured quite a few lovely photographs from dance to beautiful places in London!

[To find out more about creative professional Timothy Ward's photography and filming work, please click on the links: 

It was really good to collaborate with another creative mind, as it is easy to forget how new perspectives or ideas can be discovered. Which is also why I am very excited to disclose that I am starting to plan my next vintage inspired Qipao look which will be part of the 'Qipao Love: All About Qipao' series of posts...taking inspiration from the style development of the Qipao through history as well as the recent SS13 runway...which I hope to bring to you before Chinese New Year! (Please don't forget if you need to get in touch or have questions, Walking In May's new e-mail address is: may[at]walkinginmay[dot]com) Hope you darlings have had a fabulous weekend and will have a lovely start to the week!



Until the next time,
May xx
PS: Please click on the 'Qipao' or 'Qipao Love (All about Qipao)' LABEL below and on the right of the page, if you would like to catch up on other posts in the series or find out more about the Qipao (Cheongsam): www.walkinginmay.com/label/QiPao 

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Qipao Love: Part 4 ~ Tailoring the Qipao.....a dress made for the female form!

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Collection of Qi Pao displayed in China Silk Museum in Hangzhou, China.
[Source: www.globaltimes.cn/China-Silk-Museum-displays-Qipao-in-Hangzhou]  

Thank youso much my darlings...just wanted to tell you how grateful I am for your continued support in all forms of likes, comments, shares, pins, follows and clicks...and I am utterly thrilled to continue my journey with you walking by my side in the new year of 2013! As we continue on my little passionate journey of the 'Qipao Love', I wanted to answer some questions in my mind on what makes the Qipao an exquisite piece of art, and I thought the best way to do that is probably to look at how a Qipao (or Cheongsam) is actually made. Having altered my ready made Qipao dresses by hand myself, I know it is more than a simple case of stitch according to numbers on the measuring tape, and how delicate the measurements need to be in order to accommodate room to breathe as well as a fitted shape! So this post might be interesting or useful for you talented dress making darlings...as the research I gathered disclosed some intricate details from the cutting of the fabric to the 36 different points of measurement to create the best fitting Qipao!


Qipao Construction
The construction of a Qi Pao can take anything from one single day to one whole month or more, and involve one to ten skilled workers, depending on the quality, fabric, design, details such as embroidery or embellishment and craftsmenship required...as the beauty and quality of the Qipao is really down to the intricate details! To find out how the Qi Pao is made and why it can be really a work of art rather than just a dress.....from differentiating between the distinctive Mandarin collar and double piping down to the meaning of  differing as well as intricate frog, lute, plum blossom and butterfly buttons.....here is Part 1 to 3 of the Cultural Express 2010 documentary on 'Making the Chinese Qipao' by Chinese international channel CCTV9:
Part one covers a brief history and explains each crucial part of the Qipao. [Link to 'Making Chinese Qipao' (1/3): www.youtube.com/watch?v=M72FK9PXqJE&feature=relmfu]

Part two continues to demonstrate the intricate process of creating the frogged button. [Link to 'Making Chinese Qipao' (2/3): www.youtube.com/watch?v=3eTU8kKdmCk&feature=channel&list=UL]

Part three finishes off the straight butterfly button and explains the meanings of each different button shape or combination. [Link to 'Making Chinese Qipao'(3/3): www.youtube.com/watch?v=M9unqf0kuGU&feature=relmfu]
[OR if you prefer to watch the whole 30 minutes 'Making Chinese Qipao' documentary by CCTV9 in one full video, then the link is here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=MzvAG6ePjSM]

For a video with step by step diagram instructions on how to create your very own Chinese knot, that has been used as the 'straight buttons' of the Qipao dress:
Link to Chinese button knot video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=LceeI0Lw4P8&feature=related


Tailors...unsung heroes who made the Qipao!
Vintage calendar girls wearing Qipao ...who were the pin-up models from 1920s to 1960s.
(Source: The Doily Duck)
The Qipao started being custom made by tailors for ladies of noble birth or wealthy families more than 300 years ago, since the reign of Emperor Kang Xi of the Qing Dynasty (1636), and still retains her crowning title as an exquisite garment of status..... whether the Qipao is displayed at a high society charity gala as a party dress, worn once a year during the festivities of Chinese New Year or as a traditional fully embroidered silk gown worn by the bride during her wedding..... there is something about the Qipao that lifts one's own confidence and draw awareness to one's movement in such a way that you simply have to behave as though you are an elegant lady of status. In some ways, the Qipao becomes a reflection of your inner self, personality, style and vision..... it is not merely a dress you choose to sit with or suddenly bungee jump in, it is a painted picture of how the very best of yourself will move in an ideal world. So finding a Qipao that truly fits you as the person you are becomes a crucial part of wearing the Qipao...for me, the Qipao also becomes a fuel of personal confidence, and wearing it every Chinese New Year somehow infuses me with a magic hypnotic spell of positivity that the year ahead can only get better!

Today, a custom made and entirely hand-crafted Qipao requires a lengthy consultation; which can include up to 36 different and detailed measurements to get the perfect fit as well as the selection of fabric, design or pattern to compliment the wearer...may be a service reserved for the wealthy or for highly special occasions. But simple made to fit or altered quality pieces with limitations to the number of styles or designs one can choose, can still be ordered in stores or online shops from a designer label price tag of about £140 onwards.

The Rui Fu Xiang Silk store in Beijing, China.
A video article on China Daily; 'Where qipao is still in Vogue',  features an interview with 'Rui Fu Xiang Silks' makes a brilliant description that I love of what the Qipao really is about.....it is quite simply a form of "wrapped nudity". Just like how a painter would emphasize lines to create form, tailors would use the magical cut of fabric to frame a woman's beauty in her simple silhouette.....which also explains why the best Qipao needs to be tailored or custom made to achieve a really fitted 1950s hour-glass look. 'Rui Fu Xiang Silks' is actually one of the most famous Qipao shop in Beijing with a rich ancestry of expertise in this area, recognised as a business success story by the Chinese government and is often recommended as a place to shop for traditional Qipao by travel guides.....just watching the video (Link:  europe.chinadaily.com.cn/digest/2010-12/10/content_11683264) interview made me feel like I would be a little girl in a magical candy shop if I ever made my way there! [To find out more about the history of the famous Rui Fu Xiang Silks and their long ancestry in the clothing trade since Emperor Kang Xi's reign, please click on the link: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rui_Fu_Xiang]

Source: Qipao crush on 'Vintage Vault'
Traditionally there is a difference between the Beijing capital (Jing pai) and the Shanghai coastal (Hai pai)Qipao styles, with the Beijing style being more angular or squarish following conventional looser cuts of the original style of the dress and fuller long lengths, whilst Shanghai style is cut closer to the body and incorporates Western influences such as bare backs, middle seams, shorter or mini lengths. Experienced tailors able to craft a high quality Qipao is highly sought after by those who can afford the luxury of a custom made piece, as the high-end exquisite Qipao dresses being used on most occasions as Chinese wedding dresses or kept by wealthy collectors can easily cost US$5,000 to above US$10,000. Some Qipao stores are even specialised in certain traits to make their Qipao more unique, such as custom made floral designs that are hand painted on silk, hand embroidery patterns or a Qipao that is entirely reliant of fabric frogged buttons (without the use of zips or poppers). I found a video demonstrating how the Qipao fabric is cut and sewn, by two tailors who began learning the skill at the age of 18 years and have sewn Chinese Qipao dresses for more than 40 years.....though speaking in Mandarin about their challenging experiences of learning the trade as an apprentice in their youth and their fears of how traditional hand-made Qipao is becoming a dying art, the video showing the dress making process almost entirely by hand is quite self explanatory and impressive:
Tailors making Qipao Link: www.youtube.com/watch?NR=1&v=3jOMOtoIsXk&feature=endscreen


Famous Qipao tailor, 94 year old Master Chu!
Even more impressive...is the 94 year old tailor Master Chu Hongsheng who began his apprenticeship at the tender age of 16 and has made the Qipao for almost 80 years. His Qipao shop 'HanYi' on the Street of Eternal Happiness in Shanghai, China, has become one of the most famous places to shop for a custom made Qipao...the reason? Well...Master Chu is actually the tailor who made those amazingly beautiful Qipao dresses worn by lead actress Maggie Cheung in the movie; 'In the Mood for Love'. I would definitely recommend you have a listen of his interview (on the podcast below or through the link), as the stories he tells are truly heartwarming and really transports you back in time to get a flavour of old Shanghai Qipao glamour in the 1930s!
http://www.marketplace.org/topics/world/street-eternal-happiness/street-eternal-happiness-tailor



And if you have been inspired to create your very own Qi Pao.....you can have a look on a wonderfully talented fellow blogger's on journey of sewing her very own 'In the Mood for Love' inspired Qipao on 'Cation Design'cationdesigns.blogspot.co.uk/search/label/Qipao


Qipao Today?
Though the Qipao is no longer worn as a daily dress, there has been an influx of appreciation in recent years and I have even discovered a dedicated Qipao club in Shanghai...which would be a bit of a dream come true for me had I lived there, as you darlings might remember me saying that I would like to set up my very own 'Qipao Tea Club' one day! On the 20th May 2012 over 2000 ladies proudly wore their Qipao dresses to attend the fifth annual gathering of the 'Shanghai Cheongsam Salon' at the Shanghai Oriental Arts Centre in China. The 'Shanghai Cheongsam Salon' is a club founded by Ms Wang Weiyu in 2007 because of her love of the Qipao and a desire to promote as well as share the elegant etiquette of wearing a Qipao. Being a devout admirer of the Qipao, Ms Wang has over 52 Qipao dresses including a special altered one with a back slit for when she goes cycling and would like to see the Qipao being worn more often by women today. The club has a Culture Centre in the Xuhui district of Shanghai where members are required to don their Qipao to join activities such as exhibitions, flower arrangement, tea or dance performances, and they also run external events such as lectures or cultural afternoons to an increasing public audience.
[Sources and interesting articles on the 'Shanghai Cheongsam Salon':

Performance at the 'Shanghai Cheongsam Salon' fifth annual gathering, 20th May 2012.
(Source: www.aoehome.com/news/about-china/Cheongsam-culture-booms)
The modern styled Qipao has developed from the traditional Mandarin collar to Western influenced 'V' or 'U' shaped collars, bare backs, mini lengths, full skirts and jeans fabric to attract a younger generation. The new interest in the Qipao partly due to recent years of artistic cinematography with the Qipao as a focus has also inspired students to put their own stamp on this traditional dress. After the release of the movie 'Snow Flower and the Secret Fan', a student called Zhou Jingjing was inspired to create the old written Nu Shu script into her Qipao designs (Link: mag.womenofchina.com.cn/html/womenofchina/report/146875-1.htm).

A Qipao show on the Nanjing subway to advertise the launch of a new website in January 2012.
(Source:  www.chariweb.com/2012/03/hundred-years-of-collars)

The fifth annual gathering event organised by the 'Shanghai Cheongsam Salon' in China ~ 19 July 2012
(Source: www.beijingshots.com/2012/07/qipao-chic)
Hope you vintage loving darlings have found this post interesting, or even useful for those who want to make your very own Qipao! I shall head back to my embroidery hoop to work on a little project that I hope to reveal to you some time during Chinese New Year...have a fabulous weekend my darlings!



Until the next time,
May xx

Please help ‘Walking In May’ grow by clicking to:
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Sources and other informative Links:
europe.chinadaily.com.cn/digest/2010-12/10/content_11683264.htm
'Changing Clothes in China' by Antonia Finnane (2008)
www.chinadaily.com.cn/video/2011-02/17/content_12030533.htm
community.globaltimes.cn/forum.php?mod=viewthread&tid=3928
sg.lifestyleasia.com/in-the-spotlight-in-the-mood-for-cheongsam-modernity-and-singapore-women
blog.stylesight.com/vintage/qipao-crush

For my 1920s inspired Qipao (Cheongsam) look...please take a look at Part 3 of the 'Qipao Love: All About Qipao' post!
(Link:  www.walkinginmay.com/2013/01/looks-qipao-love-part-3my-1920s)

Qipao Love: Part 5 ~ How-To choose and wear a Qipao (Cheongsam) that will love your frame!

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The 'In the Mood for Cheongsam' exhibition in Singapore
Source: sg.lifestyleasia.com/features/Entertainment/in-the-mood-for-cheongsam-modernity-and-singapore-women 
A little warning is probably in order my darlings...as this will be a rather comprehensive How-To Qipao post! I will try to incorporate my own knowledge as well as what I researched through time, to create a rough but helpful guide for ladies who might want to attempt wearing the Qipao! Why do I say attempt? In today's fast paced life the Qipao has become a rather occasional dress even for a faithful admirer like me and I can understand why it might not be the most popular attire in the world, but I also know that many ladies who admire the Qipao might resist the idea of wearing it because of different barriers. Being a lover of the Qipao myself...trust me I know the fearful qualms and muffin top resistance to wearing a Qipao all too well.....whether it is a matter of figure, budget, impression, style, occasion, look or finding the excuse to wear a Qipao, I hope to be able to offer some help towards a solution and ask that you forgive me if I am too long winded. The Qipao really is not a dress to be feared but rather a dress to be loved...as in her very true essence; she is a form of wrapped nudity that is all about you. So without a further ado, I present you with my inadequate rough guide!

Follow your body shape...
Finding and wearing a Qipao can be a tricky matter (unless tailor or custom made) because Qipao sizes are very different from Western standard sizes and it almost is a matter of genetics in some ways.....being of Chinese heritage myself and having spent a few years of my childhood in Asia, I do believe the majority of body frames are genetically different because of one's inherited heritage...and the recent craze in wanting to become size-less-ly stick thin in Asia doesn't really help. Being 5 foot 5" (165cms) I am probably in the average category of not being petite enough and not being tall enough either, but I was often told that I am tall for an Asian girl and can barely fit into an Asian size M.....proportions and chest size is probably another bare difference as many females of Chinese heritage like myself tend to have more boyish figures with smaller chest size and not much of a hip. So whilst we are talking figures and if we were being strictly critical, I would be a big boned or average framed girl with no chest and hips to brag about.....which is also why the properly fitted Qipao can work wonders to give me a feminine waist and the sensuous illusion of curves as well as legs!
Most mass manufactured ready made Qipao dresses from China have their own sizing labels which usually follows the measurements of the chest, for example as a rough little size guide(note: size accuracy depends on the manufacturer):
Chinese Size Label
Bust or Chest
Waist
Hips
To Fit UK Size
(Equivalent)
(Size 32) Small
31"
25"
33"
UK 6
(Size 34) Medium
33"
27"
35"
UK 8
(Size 36) Large
35"
29"
37"
UK 10
(Size 38) Extra Large
37"
31"
39"
UK 12
(Size 40) XXL
39"
33"
41"
UK 14

The Qipao is often made from materials that are textured or thicker than most fabric and without any stretch or give at all such as brocade, so at least an inch or two of space between the wearer and the garment is necessary to allow for undergarments, curves and freedom of movement. This is why a Chinese Qipao Size 32 would not fit a UK Size 8 with a 32 bra size, and also why the Qipao often looks formlessly bigger than it should when hanging off a non-dimensional or flat hanger, so it is best to get a Qipao tailored or custom made if possible. Another solution if you want to buy a ready made Qipao and make it look fitted (which is what I often do), is to get the bigger size and take it in around the midsection to create a closer fit to your body (I shall explain how to do this below).....for example I am about a UK Size 10 so I would choose the large Size 36 and alter it myself at the midsection to create the fitted figure hugging look and bring out a waistline.  

A brief label of the different parts to a Qipao...from one of my embroidered Qipao!
(Link to see more of this dress: walkinginmay.blogspot.co.uk/2012/08/london-hot-spot-ballgowns)


Know what you like!
How your dress will look of course depends on what style you want, as you may just as well want a looser fit or the original pre-1920s look, in which case you won't need to alter it. There are also other factors which can help you create or affect the look you want:

  • The Material - The chosen material for a Qipao can reveal clues about the life, style preference and cultural heritage of the wearer, which is why the Qipao can be more than just the seen exterior dress and often thought to reflect the internal beauty of the woman wearing it. From brocade, silk, satin, linen, cotton, velvet, rayon, chiffon to the rarer wool, French lace and South East Asian batik fabric. [To find out more about Batik fabric, please click here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batik] The fabric's pattern, shine, texture and size as well as direction of print can draw attention to certain parts of your body or even make you appear slightly larger or shorter than you really are. For example those with slim boyish frames can use brocade to create dimension through the shine of the fabric and bring about the illusion of curves, or those with a curvier figure can use small vertical facing prints to create longer lines to the body and appear a little slimmer. Though illusions can be useful, it is important to remember that the post-1920s Qipao is really about celebrating the beauty of the female form and admiring her sensuous feminine frame. 
  • The cut and fit - The slit height and waist line through the waist darts or midsection seams might be something else to consider...also whether you want a full ankle, mid calf, knee or mini length Qipao? As the hemline and slits can draw attention to the respective part of your frame.
  • Quality - A well made and high quality Qipao will have tidy demure side slits, that should not fall awkwardly in a gaping and widely forked outwards fashion. Also the mandarin collar should be tidy, symmetrical and without awkward gaps (unless it is meant to be an open collar). It may or may not have embroidery, patterns, frogged knotted buttons, single or double piping depending of the style, material and design of the Qipao, but the details should be done to a good standard. 
  • The occasion - If you are attending a Chinese wedding as a guest then you would want to avoid a red Qipao as it is traditional for a bride to wear red on her wedding day because of the celebratory nature of the colour. Alternatively, if you want an easy care and versatile Qipao you might want to consider the cotton or linen variety.
  • The style details - Other things to consider could be whether you want a high or low mandarin collar, modern V or U shaped collar, side opening or back zip, frogged buttons of simple knots or more sophisticated designs such as chrysanthemum, blossom, phoenix, dragonfly and longevity clasps? There are actually almost 100 different frogged button designs, each with a different symbolic meaning, and more complicated clasp designs can take at least 2 days to make by hand. A higher closed mandarin collar with three simple knotted buttons is a classic that can bring out the slenderness of a silhouette for ladies with a longer neck and is best in a long or ankle length Qipao. Alternatively a higher opened mandarin collar without any frogged buttons can look more modern or youthful with a shorter length Qipao. 
My high opened mandarin collared Qipao...in midi or knee length for my Shanghai Girl look!
(Link to post and photos:  walkinginmay.com/2012/02/looks-shanghai-shanghai)


Where to hunt?
EBay is actually a great place to find your first Qipao or even to add to your collection because there is a wealth of pre-loved, handmade, custom made, tailor-made and vintage as well as more modern styled and newly ready made Qipao dresses to choose from. In the run-up to the time when I add to my Qipao collection every year, I would often run a few simple searches with keywords such as Chinese dress, Qipao or Cheongsam on Ebay to see what is available or if there are any bargains to be caught, and study the details to see if it is a fitting piece to add to my wardrobe.
In recent years there has also been a new trend of buying clothing through social media platforms such as Facebook or online blog shops, where Qipao dresses can also be found nearer to the festivities of Chinese New Year, and some online shops even specialise in selling certain types or custom made Qipao. As with most purchases online, caution should be exercised through checking customer reviews, shipping details and secure checkout transactions to ensure it is a reputable seller. This year is the first I have tried a blog shop with a Facebook page to purchase a specialised Malaysian Batik fabric Qipao, and though there was more communication with the seller than clicking a simple buy button, the beauty of this regional piece has made the efforts worthwhile! (The photo below offers a little glimpse of the lovely Batik print design.)

How to get more wear from the Qipao?
One of the things to remember is that the Qipao was once a dress used for daily wear and usually made for a purpose. So the question is.....what would you like your Qipao to serve as? Is it just for one special occasion as a wedding dress, a statement piece for fabulous parties or for more versatile purpose of incorporating the Qipao into your daily wardrobe? The cotton or linen variety are fabrics that can endure the gentler washing machine cycle, will be more suited to daily use as it was once used for that purpose, and those with floral vintage prints will likely have the pretty factor rather than the outlandish costume party look. The brocade and shiny satin variety is more eye catching and usually seen at parties or special occasions, but can be toned down with a cardigan, neutral coloured and limited number of accessories to achieve a rather chic look. The velvet, fur trimmed and lightly padded variety are more suited for colder weather and usually worn in winter.
Colour can also be an important factor and often many would seek refuge in the black Qipao to be safe, but it could really be a matter of finding a colour that compliments your complexion. I often think it is a pity to not consider other lovely hues of blue, green or even gold when the Qipao has the ability to be a statement piece of art at almost any occasion. In the famous film of 'In The Mood For Love' leading actress Maggie Cheung wore a total of 23 beautiful Shanghai tailored Qipao dresses, with a variation of colour as well as prints, to bring the audience through the changing mood in the film, but it also demonstrated a time in Hong Kong when the Qipao was used as a versatile garment in daily life and considered the fashion statement of the 1950s to 1960s.
Maggie Cheung in a high collared Qipao of the cotton or linen variety [In the Mood for Love]


How to make it fit?
Taking a loosely fitted or larger sized Qipao in at the waist through the two front seams and the two back seams (waist darts) can be done by hand with a little planning and patience. In a hope of showing you how I altered the waist to make it more fitted, I have taken a photo of one of the new Qipao dresses I have been working on...please do forgive and overlook my ugly hand stitches but it really is quite straight forward!
1) I tried on the dress to see how much I wanted to alter by measuring with a measuring tape and decided how much each waist dart or seam needs to be taken in.
2) From the inside (or under-side of fabric), I used some pins to mark where I wanted to sew in a rather curved (half-moon like) line.
3) With a needle and thread I stitched following the outline marked by pins.
4) Move on to the next seam or waist dart to repeat steps 2 and 3.
Depending on the fabric, you may have to try the dress on several times for an accurate fit, or take in the waist from the side seam instead (if the print or embroidery in the front of the dress does not accommodate waist darts) and might have to unpick to restitch the waist dart or seam until the right fit is achieved.  If you are taking in the seams of a silk brocade or satin Qipao, you might have to take more care as the fabric can easily snag, pull or be moved out of shape whilst stitching and mistakes could be easier to spot by nature of the fabric or how the patterns flows.
How I altered my new Batik fabric Qipao by hand with the help of some pins....please forgive the ugly stitches! (Waist dart or midsection of the dress from the inside)


How to care for your Qipao?
One of the challenges of wearing and keeping a Qipao will likely be the maintenance and care...how to clean a silk or brocade Qipao without losing its shine, colour and tightly weaved structure?
[An interesting article I found about the origins of Chinese silk: www.travelchinaguide.com/intro/arts/silk]
Most clothing labels tend to advice on dry cleaning silk items, but as it can become expensive and is not ideal for the environment...I tend to gently handwash my silk brocade Qipao dresses in cold water and diluted or mild detergent. Remembering not to rub or knead, I usually gently swirl my brocade or silk Qipao in a bucket of cold water (with diluted detergent) and soak for 5 minutes, before putting it in a bucket of cold water (with a small amount of vinegar) to rinse out the detergent, and then a second rinse in a plain cold water. Folding the garment in 3 or 4 folds, I try to press out as much water as possible before folding it between a towel for the last press, and then hang on a hanger to dry in the bathroom (indoors as some silks may fade under the sun). Ironing can be done on the lowest setting with a towel to protect the garment. Of course how the garment washes depends on the fabric or material and you might prefer a different cleaning method to what I usually do...also you might find the video and article links below useful:

Hopefully this post has been useful in helping you choose, wear and care for your very own Qipao or Cheongsam...especially when Chinese New Year is only a little less than two weeks away! There will be more posts to come in the 'Qipao Love' series; from a glamorous Hollywood siren to my next vintage inspired Qipao look! Have a fabulous mid-week my lovely darlings!



Until the next time,
May xx

Please help ‘Walking In May’ grow by clicking to:
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PS: Useful articles that might offer more insight on washing silk or brocades:
www.ehow.com/how_5071950_care-silk-clothes.html
www.overstock.com/guides/how-to-clean-a-silk-dress
www.silkhandicrafts.com/info/3.html
Also...for more posts on the 'Qipao Love' series, please click on the link: www.walkinginmay.com/label/Qipao-Love-All-about-Qipao
The gold brocade in Part 3 of  'Qipao Love'....my 1920s inspired Cheongsam look!
(Link: www.walkinginmay.com/2013/01/looks-qipao-love-part-3my-1920s)

LookS: 'Qipao Love' Part 6 ~ In the Mood for Qipao...with a Batik 50s twist!

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Think Elizabeth Taylor, Grace Kelly, Jackie Kennedy or even a young Queen Elizabeth II meeting Anna May Wong...and you might know where I am going with this look...with some vital inspiration from the movie 'In the Mood for Love' of course. In fact, this is actually the first time I attempted a proper bouffant...though I was weary of creating an exact copycat look of the beautiful Maggie Cheung in the movie and almost went for a beehive instead when planning the look...I am glad I opted for the bouffant in the end even with the early 6am wake. And yes...we are indeed talking about hair! There is a fine line between the bouffant and the beehive as both hairstyles involve teasing the hair to a height...but to me the bouffant is more girlishly playful with the allowance of curls, waves or pin-curls to put the spotlight on to an understated dome-like volume of hair, whilst the beehive is a straight-lined or cut to the chase overly raised hill-like height crowning the top of the head in a modern assertion of 'devil-may-care' female confidence. The feminine bouffant up-do with pin-curls that I whipped up as best I could hopefully fits the late 1950s inspired Qipao (Cheongsam) look I was looking to create...as I wanted a style that would complement rather than take the focus away from the dress. After all it is a rather unique dress! Having loved the Qipao for some time and knowing that it is a garment capable of revealing an inner world of the wearer, I was still missing a piece that reflects the Malaysian influence in my background...so a Batik Qipao was the perfect new attire! The Qipao being a traditional attire with a historical tribal influence fits in well with the origins of my Chinese Hakka tribe ancestry, whilst the Batik fabric made through the use of hot wax and dye to create beautiful painting of prints on cotton-like fabric is famous as well as traditional for South East Asian countries like Malaysia and Indonesia. In fact, at a time when the cultural revolution took place during the 1950s, the Qipao disappeared from daily wear in China but flourished in parts of South East Asia and other countries with Chinese migrants...where Chinese women still considered the Qipao as lovable daily attire with variations of fabric from linen to silk. This is also why most of the female characters of the famous 'In the Mood for Love' movie can be seen wearing a Qipao, whether the location was set in Hong Kong or Singapore the Qipao was fashionable daily wear for most women right through to the 1960s.






It is an interesting regional development for the Qipao where ladies of Chinese heritage migrating to South East Asia felt the need to reinforce their cultural identity and chose to create a fusion dress that is the Batik Qipao. [For more information on Batik fabric: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Batik] This was especially true in Malaysia with the emergence of the Nyonya culture in the small town of Melaka; where a fusion of Chinese and local Malay traditions became life, and a traditional Nyonya Kebaya dress using the Batik fabric as a sarong skirt matched with an elaborately fine embroidered top influenced by the Chinese ways was created. [For more information on the Kebaya: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kebaya]

Though my heritage is strictly more Chinese Hakka and not linked to Nyonya, it is the bit of memory where I watched a video of how the Batik was printed on a museum school trip whilst I spent a few years of my childhood in Malaysia that links me to this regional fabric. The Malaysian Batik is distinctively focused on vibrant flowers and leaves or butterfly prints in a spiral-like swirl across the fabric, which shows through almost clearly on the underside of the fabric because of the way it is printed. Some of you darlings may remember me mentioning that this was the very first time I purchased a Qipao through the new trend of specialised online blog shops. I inquired about stock availability after spotting a navy and gold Batik Cheongsam, but my size was not in stock and since Batik fabric is often produced in limited quantities, an exact dress in the same print was hard to find when out of stock. The seller of the 'Little Cheongsam Shop' kindly offered to find me another dress according to my preferences, and within two days she found a selection of Batik Qipao for me to choose...it was then when I fell in love with this simple green Batik number. Payment was arranged and I had it shipped to Singapore so that my sister could bring it to me when she came home for Christmas...once I got my hands on it, I started working with my needle to alter the dress into a fitted hourglass silhouette; which was often how a Qipao or Cheongsam would be worn in the 1950s to 1960s.

[To find out how I altered this Batik Qipao by hand to create the fitted hourglass silhouette: www.walkinginmay.com/2013/01/qipao-love-part-5-how-to]  


Dress: Batik Cheongsam from the The Little Cheongsam Shop 
Shoes: Chorus Jazz in Navy by Clarks
Bag: Navy and gold woven fabric box bag from Malaysia (holiday purchase)
Eyeliner: Clinique Quickliner for Eyes in Moss






The photoshoot was done with my photographer friend Timothy Ward, from Timothy Ward Photography, you darlings who have been following may remember him from his brilliant work on my 1920s inspired Qipao look in Part 3 of my 'Qipao Love' series! [Just in case you might have missed it, catch up with Part 3 of 'Qipao Love' here: www.walkinginmay.com/2013/01/looks-qipao-love-part-3my-1920s] Inspired by an old vintage photo of Trafalgar Square, I wondered how a regional South East Asian print would look amongst the backdrop of London's busy mix of old and new structures...so the location of Charing Cross came to mind. Braving a brighter January wind in a cotton dress at a central location in London was a challenge in itself, and my nose turned pink from the cold once again. Though this time, we worked with more inspiration from taking photos to making a video, as the excitement of the new year ahead fueled us to move from the streets to the bridge overlooking the Thames in dedicated vigour! I apologetically obstructed quite a few passer-bys rushed for time, who suddenly looked up at me with a kind surprised smile on their faces, and embarrassingly slowed the steps of a few tourists who might have thought me crazy for standing still in a short sleeved cotton dress on a cold London day...even one of my sisters thought I was too much for normality with my brazen green flick of eyeliner, bouffant-i-que hair and fluffy faux fur coat as I left the house in a hurry. Perhaps an energy of the oncoming Snake year had something to do with it that I managed to cover my timidness and ran out the door with my green wildness...or perhaps it is a sign that I should be braver in the coming year. You can probably tell that I was a little nervous with the lack of smiles and quite unprepared with all the "umms" in the video Tim filmed of me rambling on about the Qipao...which you can watch at the bottom of this post or through Tim's Youtube channel! (Youtube.com/timothydarylward)

[To find out more about Timothy Ward photography and film, please take a look at Tim's blog:









[To watch my Qipao video on Youtube: 

Indeed Chinese New Year is probably the most likely time you can spot a Qipao (Cheongsam) out and about...it is probably my favourite time to make every excuse to wear a Qipao too. How are you darlings celebrating the beginning of the year of the fire Snake (2013)? For Chinese families like mine, a mixture of food, laughter and family is really the highlight of the festival because of the traditional emphasis on family unity...with an added plus of donning the Qipao for me of course! Since the beginning of this 15 days celebration kicked off with me trying to be over ambitious...from trying to stay up all night to follow the ancient tradition of wishing for my parents longevity through the sacrifice of sleep and using the time to finish this post in hope of publishing on the first day of Chinese New Year, but ending up asleep in bed with my laptop rested on my lap...to trying to attend a surprise birthday gathering for one of my lovely girlfriends Amancay on the first day of Chinese New Year but not making it in the end...I really hope that the effort of trying will at least be something positive to add to the new year. Perhaps it is even a sign that I should pace myself and avoid planning too much in the year to come...or perhaps a concoction of surprised intuition, belief in the beauty of goodness and dedication in trying the best one could will be a more fruitful plan for the year ahead. Here's wishing all you lovely darlings, on this cracking second day of Chinese New Year, an utterly fabulous year of the fire Snake 2013 ...may you always be blessed with happiness, good health, love and good fortune!

'Gong Xi Fa Chai! Xin Nian Kuai Le!'


Until the next time,
May xx

Please help ‘Walking In May’ grow by clicking to:
Love on Bloglovin 
Plus on Google+
Like on Facebook
Tweet on Twitter
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THANK YOU so so much!


*Resource/Interesting articles:
'In the Mood for Cheongsam' Exhibition in Singapore: sg.lifestyleasia.com/features/Entertainment/in-the-spotlight-in-the-mood-for-cheongsam-modernity-and-singapore-women-11144
The 1950s Bouffant: fiftieswedding.com/fifties-friday-discovering-the-1950s-bouffant
Bouffant and Beehives: www.stylist.co.uk/beauty/bouffants-and-beehives
'In the Mood for Love': en.wikipedia.org/wiki/In_the_Mood_for_Love

'In the Mood for Qipao'

Qipao Love: Part 7 ~ When Qipao clad Nancy Kwan became the iconic 60s siren!

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The World of Suzie Wong
Source: nancy-kwan.com/nancy18 
Following my 1950s inspired Batik Qipao look in Part 6, I thought I should follow the thread onwards to uncover a little about the Qipao in the 1960s in Part 7 of the 'Qipao Love' series...which has quite a bit to do with an iconic Hollywood siren! Nancy Kwan is probably best known for 'The World of Suzie Wong' (1960) ...which actually began her accidental career as an actress, propelled her to iconic sex siren Hollywood platform, offered her up to a Golden Globe nomination and nicknamed the 'Chinese Bardot' of the 60s. But what some may not know or have forgotten is the simple reason why Suzie Wong is dressed almost entirely in figure fitting Qipao (Cheongsam) dresses in the film. Since 1950s to 1960s Hong Kong was the height of popularity for the Qipao, she became one of the most chosen garments for many famous actresses and singers who led a frenzy of fashion-ability...in other words, most girls took to wearing a Qipao daily in a wish to be as beautiful and glamorous as the stars they saw plastered across calendars as well as posters. On a different side of the geographical page, the Qipao (or Cheongsam) began captivating a Western audience when Jennifer Jones wore a Qipao in almost every scene of the Oscar winning film 'Love is a many splendored thing' (1955), and Butterick 1950s Cheongsam style dress patterns (vintagepatterns-Cheongsam) started appearing for ladies who wanted to tap into the new trend. [For more information on 'Love is a many splendored thing': en.wikipedia.org/Love_Is_a_Many-Splendored_Thing_(film)] So by the time 'The World of Suzie Wong' was released in 1960, it further enforced the Qipao's fashion-ability and the iconic look of Nancy Kwan in a tightly fitted Cheongsam became imprinted in the minds of many...take a look at Nancy dancing Cha Cha in the 'World of Suzie Wong' to see why:

Source: pdxretro.com/2011/05/nancy-kwan-is-72-today

Source: nancy-kwan.com/nancyX8 

Source: nancy-kwan.com/nancy517 
Originally taken on as an underwriter, Nancy was surprised with the leading lady role in 'The World of Suzie Wong'...interesting enough it seems luck took her on a path of discovery through most of her life. Born to an English fashion model mother Marquita Scott and Hong Kong Chinese architect father Kwan Wing Hong on the 19th May 1939, Nancy Ka Shen Kwan is an interesting Hollywood siren to say the least! Having survived World War 2 with her family and her parent's divorce at a young age, she was a spirited child who learned Tai Chi, enjoyed horse riding with her pony and diligently aspired to be a ballerina with hours of ballet practice every day. Studying at the prestigious Royal Ballet in London, she performed in Swan Lake as well as Sleeping Beauty, gained a qualification to teach ballet and eventually returned to Hong Kong to start a ballet school. Though not intending to become an actress or singer, she was spotted by Hollywood producer Ray Stark whilst in Hong Kong...a screen test followed and the twenty year old Nancy was then signed and sent to further her training as an actress...so the rest pretty much became history!

Video (above): Nancy singing the 'Cloud Song' in the 'World of Suzie Wong' (1960).

Source: wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/95/Nancy_Kwan's_screen_test_in_The_World_of_Suzie_Wong.jpg 

Publicity photo in 1960s
Source: nancy-kwan.com/nancye4 

Publicity photo in 1960s...Nancy Kwan with her father Wing Hong Kwan.
Source: nancy-kwan.com/nancy537 
Source: www.toutceciestmagnifique.com/world-of-suzie-wong 

Suzie Wong propelled her to stardom! Nancy being half English was made to look even more Chinese in the 'World of Suzie Wong' as there were complaints that she did not look Asian enough. After Suzie Wong became a box-office hit and she was awarded a Golden Globe for 'Most Promising Newcomer- Female', Nancy starred in the first all-Asian cast big budget American film the 'Flower Drum Song' (1961). Here is a video of Nancy doing a dance number in the 'Flower Drum Song' with the jazzy pirouette of a brilliant dancer:

The Flower Drum Song (1961)
Source: www.tvguide.com/celebrities/nancy-kwan 

Source: www.whosdatedwho.com/screen-stories-magazine-united-states-december-1961 
Nancy worked through marriages, parenthood and family duties...appearing in over 50 films, 2 television series, several audiobooks, Tai Chi video and documentaries throughout her career, as well as being a film sreenwriter and executive. Perhaps one of her more notable projects is the film 'Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story' (1993), as she played a big role of shaping and appearing in the film which was fueled by her personal friendship with the late Bruce Lee and his family. To reveal a little more about this interesting lady behind the Suzie Wong dress, who McCall's magazine named 'The China Doll That Men Liked' in 1962, here is short clip from the 2010 'To whom it may concern' documentary about Nancy Kwan's life:

Source: nancy-kwan.com/nancy415 
Famous Vidal Sassoon bob - Vogue 1963 by British photographer Terence Donovan.
Source: fashion.telegraph.co.uk/photographs-Terence-Donovan 
One last fascinating bit is known as 'The Kwan' ...in 1963 Nancy was spotted with a new daringly geometrical short bob designed by London's Vidal Sassoon that caused quite a stir and the 'Kwan bob' was featured in both the American as well British Vogue editions (photographed by the late Terence Donovan) starting off a frenzied following! Hopefully you darlings have enjoyed reading this post about an interesting Hollywood siren who has been compared to the great Anna May Wong...I must say a big  THANK YOU for all the wonderful comments as well as likes on my previous 1950s inspired Batik Qipao look (Part 6 of 'Qipao Love')...I can't even begin to tell you how much your kind support means to me! Also I finally had my first Qipao Tea Party to celebrate Chinese New Year with a few friends...we had a marvelous time with a beautiful pot of Blue Blossom Earl Grey as well as a spot of red velvet cake at Camellia's Tea House in Covent Garden (London). [You can catch up with the photos on the Timothy Ward Photography Facebook page here: www.facebook.com/Qipao-Tea-Party] And, if you happen to be in Asia or have been enjoying the last celebratory fifteenth lunar day of the new year (which was Sunday)...Happy belated Chinese Valentines Day!



Until the next time,
May xx

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*Sources:
nancy-kwan.com
http://nancy-kwan.com/biography.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nancy_Kwan
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World_of_Suzie_Wong_(film)
lueastmagazine.com/2012/03/the-return-of-the-cheongsam

For more on my 1950s inspired Batik Qipao look in Part 6 of 'Qipao Love':
www.walkinginmay.com/looks-qipao-love-part-6-in-mood-for

Qipao Love: Part 8 ~ Qipao on the silver screen.....

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Jennifer Jones as Han Suyin ('Love is a many splendored thing' - 1955)
Source
The film that actually made the Qipao (Cheongsam) a frenzied fashion trend in the West, with dress patterns suddenly appearing for the public to create their own version of the style, was actually the American production 'Love is a Many Splendored Thing' (1955) with lead actress Jennifer Jones ...but the British production 'World of Suzie Wong' (1960) is often more remembered with the greater display of tightly glamorous Cheongsam dresses in every scene, the scandalous nature of the character's profession and lead actress Nancy Kwan's Golden Globe nomination. Just in case you lovely darlings may be wondering...I am indeed devotedly fascinated by the Qipao, as many of you can probably tell already, and I also found it interesting how this beautiful garment is depicted in different films on the silver screen...which is why this is Part 8 of 'Qipao Love'. Though this is a long list of beautiful films featuring the Qipao, each is unique with its own perception and agenda...I must also confess that some I have watched whilst others are on my to-watch list...but they are all films that I think are worth a gander for many reason. So here goes.....



'Love is a Many Splendored Thing' (1955)
Here is a video clip of the love story between mixed heritage doctor Han Suyin played by Jennifer Jones and Mark Elliot (by William Holden) that runs to the song 'Love is a Many Splendore Thing' [Youtube Link] ...one for my to-watch list as I am certainly intrigued by how it began the Qipao trend in the West!
Links: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_Is_a_Many-Splendored_Thing_(film)

'Love is a Many Splendored Thing' (1955) - Source 



'Kong Zhong Xiao Jie' (Air Hostess - 1959)
Air Hostess (1959) - Source
What I found interesting about 'Air Hostess' is how the film managed to capture a period of technological modernity towards the end of 1950s Hong Kong and focus on the changing roles of women as well as fashion. It was the first film produced in colour by MP&GI of Hong Kong cinema, and the vibrancy of differing daily 50s wear from tightly fitted Qipao to flouncy full circled or narrowing pencil dresses is indeed a feast for the eyes! A rather refreshing film that follows three women who deviate from the traditional route of marriage to become a part of the modern workforce, choose what they want despite stereotypes and enjoy newly found independence through flying in the air. Below is a video clip of lead actress Grace Chang singing 'Oh Calypso' (in Mandarin with English subtitles) from the film and also a link to the full movie!
Links:
www.imdb.com/title/tt0211467
www.brns.com/pages4/drama259
www.hkcinemagic.com/Grace-Chang
*To watch 'Air Hostess' in full with English subtitles: www.viki.com/channels/12165-air-hostess

Hong Kong Cinema production 'Kong Zhong Xiao Jie' (Air Hostess - 1959) with Grace Chang, Julie Yeh and So Fung
Source: www.brns.com/pages4/drama259 



'The world of Suzie Wong' (1960)
Scandalous in the sense that the main role Suzie Wong happens to be a prostitute who falls in love with a Westerner, but heart warming in the sense it was an old fashioned Cinderella love story and glamorous because of the array of beautifully fitted Qipao dresses worn by lead actress Nancy Kwan!
Links:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_World_of_Suzie_Wong_(film)
'The World of Suzie Wong' (1960) - Source: www.ferdyonfilms.com/the-world-of-suzie-wong-1960 
'The World of Suzie Wong' (1960) - Source 



'Raise the Red Lantern' (1991)
[Actress: Gong Li]
This was probably the first Zhang Yimou film I watched and the first time I saw the beautiful Gong Li on the television screen...but it is also a gripping film I have been unable to forget ever since. The story of a young girl who becomes a concubine in 1920s China and a film that explores the value of a female in traditional Chinese society...intense and not one for the faint hearted.
Link:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raise_the_Red_Lantern
www.imdb.com/title/tt0101640
Source: kirasan.kenne-ich.net/red_lantern 
Source


'Center Stage - Ruan Ying Lu' (1992)
Famous 1920-30s Shanghai actress Ruan Ying Lu
(Source)
A film that is part biography; in telling the short life of legendary 1920-30s silent film actress Ruan Ying Lu, who was named the Chinese Garbo and acted in over 20 highly regarded films before taking her own life at a tender age of 24 years (1910-1935)...and part documentary. Maggie Cheung plays the starlet Ruan Ying Lu in the film, but also narrates and answers an interview in what she as an actress herself thinks about the great Shanghai golden age siren. Having read mixed reviews from sheer brilliance of perception to failed documentary claims, it is still a film I wish to track down and watch as Maggie Cheung simply looks ravishing in all 1930s gloried Qipao style from the photos as well as trailers I have seen so far...


Links:
www.imdb.com/center-stage/tt0102816
mano-lin.blogspot.co.uk/2007/ruan-ling-yu
www.lovehkfilm.com/reviews_2/centre_stage
sensesofcinema.com/2001/12/cheung
www.imdb.com/name/nm0747716


www.lovehkfilm.com/Center-Stage 
Source 



'In the Mood for Love' (2000) 
[Actress: Maggie Cheung]
Source 
It is difficult to sing praises for such a well known film, but I can't tell you enough...how much I adore the 23 Qipao dresses that Maggie Cheung dons in the film! A visual feast and a suspense of emotional high...it is a simple story of people in love and torn between desires as well as choices...but it holds me to silence every single time I watch this film. The beautifully restricting high collar holds her to the principles she values, the pretty floral prints are a dream of better days and the figure hugging silhouette of the Qipao tells of a desire to seek perfection as well as beauty...and I have not even begun with the handbags or decor. It is not really a film about the plot, it is more an experience of walking slowly through a gallery of art pieces...intensely beautiful...definitely take a little gander and see what you think!

Links:
en.wikipedia.org/ITMFL
www.imdb.com/tt0118694
guardian.co.uk/moodforlove 
wkw-inthemoodforlove.com

Source 
Source 



'2046' (2004)
[Actresses: Carina Lau, Zhang Ziyi, Maggie Cheung and Gong Li]
Like watching fragments of memory and imagination mixed into the same slot...the characters weave their own life and desires into form. This is the aftermath of the unconsumated affair of 'In the Mood for Love', where the male lead Chow enters into three different relationships and later reveals a futuristic figment of his imagination...emotional, fun and illogical, but shot beautifully in the quirky Wong Kar-Wai way.
Link:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2046_(film)
www.imdb.com/title/tt0212712
Zhang ZiYi as Bai Ling in '2046' (2004)
Source 
Source



Lust, Caution (2007) 
[Actress: Tang Wei]
Lead actress Tong Wei is transformed from a girl into a lady through a total of 27 different Qipao dresses in the film 'Lust, Caution' (2007). A wartime thriller with spies, missions, love, sex, loyalty and betrayal... contradictory and scandalous...but artfully directed by Ang Lee and winner of the Golden Lion Award at the Venice Film Festival.
Link:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lust,_Caution_(film)
Source: www.nainai-fashion.com/2012/cheongsam-in-chinese-films 



'Shanghai' (2010)
[Actress: Gong Li]
Source 
With John Cusack and Chow Yun Fat as the leading men, beautiful Gong Li delivers a captivating performance in 'Shanghai' (2010). A thriller that was meant to be set in war washed Shanghai in 1941 (WW2), where an American agent seek to uncover the truth of a murder but ends up involved with a wealthy war lord and his wife...

Links:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shanghai(2010)
www.imdb.com/title/tt1092634
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gong_Li


Source 




'The Flowers of War' (2011)
[Actress: Ni Ni]
Source 
Based on the 1937 'Rape of Nanking', the film tells the brutal story when Japan invaded China...but the focus is on the women and children of war. The good, the bad and the beautiful in humankind can be seen in this intensely gripping film, which made me gasp in excitement for the visually stunning costumes and drove me to tears in silent emotions that applauded the bravery of the forgotten unsung heroes towards the end. Thoroughly recommended though not for the faint hearted...a Zhang Yimou film that was nominated for a Golden Globe Award and deserves much more than it got. Below is a video clip from my favourite part of the film...
Links:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Flowers_of_War
www.imdb.com/title/tt1410063

Source: leopardandlipstick.blogspot.co.uk/the-flowers-of-war 
The Flowers of War (2011) by Zhang Yi Mou.
Source: http://news.cultural-china.com/20111230094025.html 



'Dangerous Liaison' (2012)
[Actresses: Zhang Ziyi and Cecilia Yip]
A remake of the 1782 French novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses, but this time the story is set in the decadent 1930s 'Paris of the East' that is Shanghai...definitely one on my to-watch list after all the beautiful costumes spotted in the photos as well as trailer, and the picture painted by the glorious reviews so far...
Links:
www.imdb.com/title/tt2071441
audaud.com/2013/02/dangerous-liaisons 
www.flix66.com/2013/03/05/movie-review-dangerous-liaisons-2012


Source 
Source 



'The Grandmaster' (2013)
Source 
[Actress: Zhang Ziyi]
Having just been released in parts of the world, Wong Kar-Wai's 'Grandmaster' (2013) will be one to catch in the cinemas or on DVD with a male companion...as it continues to surprise box office figures and plans for festival appearances create a promising image. An action orientated  film based on the life of Kung Fu (martial arts) master Ip Man during the 1930s to 1950s. Mixed reviews so far and claims that it is packed with stunning stunts but also visually pleasing Qipao dresses...an intriguing one to anticipate perhaps!

Links:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Grandmaster_(film)
www.wongkarwai.net/new-stills-for-the-grandmasters
screeningchina.blogspot.co.uk/shock-box-office-hit-wong


Source 


Apologies for another long post my lovely darlings and I hope you enjoyed it! We are drawing near to the end of the 'Qipao Love' series I am afraid and the next post will be the finale...but I can reveal that it will be a crafty post I promised for some time! Perhaps next year we will have a 'Qipao Love 2' series, but for now I must say a very big THANK YOU for all your loving support of the series so far! It has been a lovely journey to share with you and I really have loved hearing what you think about the Qipao series. As we have been encroaching into March I am looking forward to spring, and tonight I am heading to a special 'In-Salon Vintage Styling' event at the Painted Lady which I can't wait to tell you all about soon! Have a fabulous weekend my lovely darlings!



Until the next time,
May xx

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My 1920s inspired Qipao (Cheongsam) look...Part 3 of the 'Qipao Love' series!
www.walkinginmay.com/2013/01/looks-qipao-love-part-3my-1920s 

Qipao Love: Part 9 ~ Getting crafty with a needle and the Qipao...

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Li Ling-Ai arriving in Los Angeles for premiere of 'KUKAN'
1941
(Oscar winning feature documentary)
Source
Welcome back to the finale post of the 'Qipao Love' series...in Part 9 I thought I would follow on to reveal the craft project I had completed just before Chinese New Year, which is a little extension of  Part 5's 'How-To Choose and Wear a Qipao (Cheongsam) that will Love Your Frame!' [To catch up with Part 5 of 'Qipao Love' please click here: www.walkinginmay.com/qipao-love-part-5] You might have read my inadequate little guide on finding your very own Qipao and the suggestion of searching on Ebay which I sometimes do...last December I actually discovered one which reminded me of the Qipao Chinese American playwright and director Li Ling-Ai wore in 1941 to the premiere of her documentary film KUKAN in Los Angeles! The issue was that the one selling on Ebay happened to be a short knee-length Qipao with what looked like unrefined machine embroidery and a low mandarin collar, but in light of the wearing something red to bring luck for the new year ahead it did hit the spot and I suddenly had the idea to try to make something of a craft project with this dress. So I daringly ordered the dress on Ebay...two weeks later the wrong dress appeared in the post and I got it sent back to China...when the right dress finally arrived I must admit I was a little disappointed as the machine embroidery was quite the quiz of mind...I could not work out what it was meant to be. The next step was what to do with it...I pondered with the ideas of clouds, leaves, flowers, dragons and butterflies in an attempt to understand the machine embroidered patches...then I decided I would create a craft experiment and let my needle flow freely to paint whatever it wanted. Without any patterns drawn, I sketched a blurry picture of flowers and leaves in the depths of my mind...then just reached for my embroidery floss and needle. So I guess what I am trying to say is that this was an utterly freestyle embroidery project that took a life of its own as I stitched...after learning Silk Shading embroidery a little while ago through a book and doing only one other embroidery project prior to starting on this Qipao. Which is probably why it took quite a while with me stitching before bedtimes and weekend afternoons for a gradual month...with my cat BouBou wondering what on earth I could focus so closely on that he kept putting his paw down to hold on to parts of the dress as I stitched.


BEFORE

BEFORE (Close up of the Machine Embroidery)

I must admit I am not the most creative of persons and though this looks like an utterly simple or even child-like project to many a master embroiderers or crafters...I couldn't help but smile proudly at my Qipao once it was finally completed! I suppose it was more the satisfaction that I managed to create something, however inadequately skilled I may be or even if nobody really noticed I worked a part of the embroidery on this Qipao...it was a case of the little things that mattered. So please take a little look at my crafty little embroidery attempt and see what you think...the photos above are the 'BEFORE' pictures of how the Qipao originally looked...and below are the 'AFTER' photos!

Flower number one done....

Stitching Flower number one...
BouBou focusing as Flower number two was stitched at bedtime...

Flower number three, leaves and so on...

Working on the bottom part of the dress...embroidering smaller flowers....

BouBou laying claim to his embroidery work!   =^..^=

Bottom half....finally completed with little flowers....

My completed embroidery project...just one week before Chinese New Year!

Using a combination of satin stitch, long and short stitch ....I am not sure you will agree but I decided to embroider small bud-like flowers on the bottom part of the dress so that it did not take away from the bigger flowers on the top half of the dress. Another reason....truth be told was my worries of not completing on time...hopefully you will agree that my needle painting has added to the dress rather than ruined it!

In my new Qipao on the first day of the year...Chinese New Year of fire Snake 2013!
So...this post (Part 9) closes the 'Qipao Love' series so far! [You can catch up on the full 'Qipao Love: All About Qipao (Cheongsam)' series here: www.walkinginmay.com/label/QipaoLove] But before I go...to answer a little request from a lovely reader Julie I would like to mention a quick tip on how to accessorise a Qipao: I usually take inspiration from a style period like the 1930s or 1920s, but I do find that Art Deco jewellery, pearls, crystals or gemstones with a vintage feel tend to go well with the Qipao. In terms of necklaces, short pearl necklaces close to the collar tend to complement the Qipao quite well too. Hopefully there will be a 'Qipao Love 2' in the future where I can cover the subject of accessories with a Qipao in even more detail! More inspiration on How-To wear a Qipao can also be seen on my Pinterest board here:
Here's wishing all you lovely darlings a fabulous weekend!




Until the next time,
May xx

Please help ‘Walking In May’ grow by clicking to:
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Sources:
www.nestedeggproductions.com/more-about-kukan


Put a red nose on it...and fly high for Blighty!

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Details from a 1940s uniform...BA.
Hello my lovely darlings! You might be a little surprised as my weekly post is quite early this week, but there is a special reason for it and I hope your week is off to a flying start anyway! Friday 15th March 2013 was 'Red Nose Day' and I was contacted by British Airway's (BA) marketing agency who hoped that I can help spread the word about their new project "Flying Start" which is raising funds for the charity Comic Relief. (Just in case you might be wondering....no, this is not a sponsored post and no pennies were exchanged...but of course if you would like to donate all the pennies at the bottom of your sofa or lose change in your pocket to Comic Relief I would be more than happy to urge you on!)
Grooving in the 1970s uniform....BA.

The stripes and tartans breaking through in the 1980s....BA.
Those of you who live in the UK are likely to know about Comic Relief...a charity that has been working to improve the lives of impoverished or disadvantaged children in the UK as well as abroad. For some like myself, it is probably best remembered for 'Red Nose Day'...when the school canteen would be filled with bake sales offering goodies like cakes or cookies and everyone bought a red nose or had face paint of some sort....all in the name of raising funds for charity. I just love the idea that children are fundraising to help other children, as it really fits in with Comic Relief's vision of teaching the helped how to fish rather than just giving them an outright portion of fish...more importantly I really do believe that knowledge and skills are the only true solution to poverty.
[Find out more about Comic Relief here: www.rednoseday.com]

From the pretty 1950s to the rocking 1960s....BA.

The full collection of vintage uniforms at the BA Fashion Show...did you spot the pretty paper dress?

So I am glad to spread the news on this special new project between Comic Relief and British Airways...in the hope that every child will have a 'Flying Start' to life, whether she is a child on living rough the street or he is a young carer looking after an ill family member. Having attracted names such as Alexandra Burke, Gok Wan, One Direction and Kim Wilde...from the '50 Years of Flair' fashion show parading the vintagecollection of BA uniforms from the 1940s to 1980s (see photos from 'Fashion Through the Age of Aviation Show'), to a Guinness World Record for the highest gig in the sky...the 'Flying Start' seems like one project us Brits can be proud to support! Whether you are walking on the high street or flying on a British Airways flight this week, please please please do give any amount you can or buy a red nose and be a part of a child's flying start to life!
[Find out more about 'Flying Start' here: www.ba-flyingstart.com/about]

It's over and out from me for now....but if you would like to see more photos on the gorgeous vintage BA uniforms through the years then do follow on to the gallery on this link: www.britishairways.com/travel/heritage-uniforms
Have a fabulous week my lovely darlings...and don't forget to put your red noses on!



Until the next time,
May xx

*Note: None of the photos in this particular post belong to me, as they are from British Airways and the Flying Start project.

Please help ‘Walking In May’ grow by clicking to:
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British Airways BEA 1954 - 1960

Rolling up at the Painted Lady!

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With Belinda Hay...at The Painted Lady (London)!
Alittle while ago I booked a place on a hair styling evening at a vintage salon in Shoreditch (London) called The Painted Lady...and it was a lovely evening indeed! A stonethrow away from Shoreditch High Street overground station, it is hidden like a little gem on an inconspicuously grey London street; that is Redchurch Street, and through the glass door another world seems to beckon passer bys. Inside, the Painted Lady is lovingly decorated in details that will bring you back to the past…from the exposed brickwork walls and stunning vintage dressing table to the lavish old record player that was so preciously pretty that I dared not touch in fear of scarring it. Besides all the modern amenities of a salon, the Painted Lady also offers a manicure service specialising in the vintage half moon tips and even retro styling parties for groups! (Mind you...this is not a sponsored post, but rather a little sharing of my experience at the in-salon styling evening at the Painted Lady London.)

[To find out more about the Painted Lady (Shoreditch), please take a look at their website:

Getting my hair prepped with a curling iron....

After the front has been curled....

From the back...
Being more used to pin curls than victory rolls, the styling evening was very helpful as Belinda went through the nitty gritty of how to make the victory rolls work and demonstrated two workable styles that I could do for myself. I must say I do find victory rolls challenging as I have been trying to work out where the rolls should sit sensibly and how to style my waist length hair in victory rolls that are not ridiculously too big…so Belinda being the author of ‘Style Me Vintage’ and the founder of the Painted Lady was definitely an invaluable help! [To find out more about the book: www.amazon.co.uk/Style-Me-Vintage-Belinda-Hay]
Can you spot the old record player....and how pretty is that dressing table?

Vintage style 1...side victory roll joining up to form a long roll across the back...

Vintage style 2....double victory rolls with rolls across the back in an updo!
The evening is a light hearted and enjoyable treat from Belinda and her lovely team for anyone who is interested in vintage hairstyles…made to feel very welcome as though I was at a girly meet-up with some friends who enjoyed talking about hair, Shoreditch and vintage over a glass of wine as well as a little goodie bag. Belinda was very kind in suggesting victory roll styles I could try with my longer length hair. It is a free event and happens monthly but a booking to guarantee a place is necessary. The good news for you lovely darlings in London is that the April in-salon styling evening is set to be interesting with a special focus on vintage make-up…so make sure you save yourself a place by e-mailing the Painted Lady or messaging through their Facebook page!


[The Painted Lady's Facebook Page: www.facebook.com/The-Painted-Lady-London]
Style 1...conventional vintage triple victory rolls! 

Style 2...vintage quiff-like half victory roll on top!

BouBou exploring the cute little goody bag I brought home....

Which style do you darlings like better? I came away with a few more ideas on how to style my victory rolls, so hopefully I will be able to show you darlings some progress after a few experimental attempts myself. Perhaps I can even delve into Belinda’s book to see what inspired vintage hairstyles I can whip up…as I have recently got the book. And as the Easter break is approaching…will you London dolls be shimmying at the Lady Luck Club Easter Ball? Whatever you may be up to...have a fabulous Easter break my lovely darlings!



Until the next time,
May xx

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Rolling, rolling, rolling...to a fabulous GIVEAWAY!

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After some hours watching me roll, BouBou decied to nap!
As promised my lovely darlings…here is my victory roll hair style inspired by Belinda Hay of the Painted Lady in London’s Shoreditch, and a special little announcement for you lovely darlings…Walking In May is having a very first GIVEAWAY! Thanks to Belinda who very kindly suggested giving away a SIGNED copy of her vintage hair styling book ‘Style Me Vintage’ to my lovely readers…so Belinda will be offering the book and I shall cover the postage. As I wanted to try out some of the styles from the book and give you a little feedback on it…the giveaway tied in nicely indeed!

Firstly the key words to this post is probably; roll, roll and roll! Having only ever done my side victory rolls on several occasions and being more used to pin-curls…I took almost 3 days of practice to get my newly inspired victory roll style to look half decent…which was with help in the form of advise from Belinda during the in-salon style session and the detailed instructions in her ‘Style Me Vintage’ book. Those of you darlings who are yet to go pro on victory rolls will probably understand what I am banging on about, as they can be rather tricky between rolling neatly, fidgeting fingers and balancing hair out. For me the challenges of where to position the victory roll and how not to make the roll look outrageously too big or out of proportion is key…which is one of the reasons why I haven't attempted a 40s victory roll look so much...thus Belinda’s tips came in quite useful and I decided to adapt the second style she showed me with the 1940s victory roll style in her book. [Catch up on my previous post...where I met Belinda at the Painted Lady here: www.walkinginmay.com/rolling-up-at-painted-lady]
My outrageous side victory rolls!

All rolled up...in a wonky sort of way...unfortunately not looking identical to the book!

The inspiration from Belinda's book...how it was meant to be...sort-of! 

Setting to the task at hand with less thought than should have been, my attempt to complete the style fell short of the hoped result…because I found the reality of rolling up waist length hair at the back of my head more difficult and tiring than expected. The step-by-step instructions and photos in the book were very clear, so I could follow all the steps in delight…but the tricky bit appeared in how to get each back roll to finish to the same size so that it appears like a long big roll across the back. I suppose it is a technical issue of needing more practice to get used to rolling from the back, and learning a way to even out the size or height of the rolls myself, so not a fault of the book at all. Perhaps more tips on how to roll from the back of the head, or helpful hints on achieving even sized rolls would be very useful in the book, as it is probably more a book for new admirers of vintage hairstyles…or for fans who have a little experience of certain styles but would like to pick up on other vintage styles too like me. Nevertheless, ‘Style Me Vintage’ is a great resource to have in order to lay the foundation of many vintage styles...and got me quite excited in wanting to practice several other styles besides the victory rolls...including a few exciting variations of my beloved Beehive and a different method to perfect my finger waving technique!
Can you spot a curious BouBou looking up at me?

Close up of the navy blue Batik floral print...

Blowing kisses to my BouBou! ^_~

And as you can probably tell...after a days worth of rolling I decided to get a little dolled up with my navy blue Batik Qipao (Cheongsam) and Fiorelli 'Like A Prayer' leopard print grab bag to have fun taking some photos in my not so glamorous room...please do forgive the messy conditions as I had just had a Qipao handwashing day! I tend to handwash my Qipao dresses in smaller batches as they need to be hung-dry and aired indoors. [To find out How-To wash, clean, choose and wear your very own Qipao or Cheongsam, please click on this link: www.walkinginmay.com/qipao-love-part-5-how-to-choose-and-wear] But I decided to unroll the wonky back and curled it lightly with a curling tong...which you can probably see in one of the photos below...also me doing all sorts of silliness with an unimpressed BouBou! 
[To catch up with the 'Qipao Love: All About Qipao' series, please click here: www.walkinginmay.com/QipaoLove]

Without further ado…here is therules for the GIVEAWAY:
  1. To enter the GIVEAWAY, either follow Walking In May on Facebook (here) or Bloglovin (here) and leave a comment with your contact details (or email it to: may[at]walkinginmay[dot]com) on this post to let me know you have entered!
  2. The prize for the GIVEAWAY is one SIGNED copy of ‘Style Me Vintage’ (Hair) by Belinda Hay!
  3. The GIVEAWAY is open to existing followers and those new to Walking In May…international or local (UK)!
  4. The deadline for entering the GIVEAWAY is on 10thApril 2013 and the winner will be chosen (out of a hat)…then announced in the following post!  

After the back rolls were taken out!

Good Luck my lovely darlings...and thank you so much for entering the GIVEAWAY! Have an absolutely fabulous week!




Until the next time,
May xx

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Mad for the 60s with 'Hey Doll' Vintage Magazine (Issue 3)...and the Winner of the GIVEAWAY is...

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BouBou picking the lucky winner ...
Apologies for keeping you lovely darlings waiting a little while longer for this week's post...it has been a rather unpredictable week! The good news is I have finally put all the participating names into my cloche hat and got BouBou to pick one! Yes...my clever little cat BouBou popped his head into the hat and pulled out a piece of paper, which I quickly took before he could run away with it. And the lucky winner of the GIVEAWAY is....(drum-roll)...Deborah from Hellcat Vintage! Congratulations my darling from both myself and the lovely Belinda Hay at the Painted Lady!

[To find out more about the vintage salon in Shoreditch; The Painted Lady, please click here: 
OR my post about victory rolls at the Painted Lady:

The other little bit of good news is...that my photograph has been featured in the 'Hey Doll!' vintage magazine's reader section! If you love vintage then it is likely that you might have heard of this magazine already...but if not, then I can recommend it as a lovely digital collaboration between two bloggers who love vintage...Bunny from Bunny's Victory and Brittany from Va-Voom Vintage! Not only is this gem of a read absolutely loaded with interesting vintage how-to(s), pretty photographs and true vintage lifestyle experiences...it is actually free and can be read as long as you have internet access. So it truly is a labour of love by real women who want to share a passion with others. Having been a dedicated reader of the vintage magazine from the very first issue...I remember falling in love with the cover photograph of Audrey Hepburn, I was quite excited to find that Issue 3 would be all about the 1960s and heavily inspired by the sexy television series 'Mad Men'. As some of you darlings might know...I happen to have a little fondness of the beehive and can be seen with my eyeliner flick where make-up is involved. So I decided to send in one of my more decent looking beehive photograph...which you darlings might remember from afternoon tea with Judita. [To catch up on my afternoon tea in a beehive, please click here: walkinginmay.com/london-hot-spots-afternoon-tea] It wasn't anything spectacular and I was certain that the magazine would have an influx of brilliant photographs that would probably move me to the bottom of the pile...but when I flipped towards the end of the magazine to see that very photograph, my face lit up and I started jumping around the room with a very puzzled BouBou staring at me! Without further ado, I present to you darlings the fabulous 60s inspired Issue 3 of 'Hey Doll!' Vintage Magazine...and please don't forget to take a peek at page 59 where you might find a familiar face!

Link to Issue 3 of 'Hey Doll!' Vintage Magazine:




To find out more about the 'Hey Doll!' Vintage Magazine, please click on the button (side bar) or use this link to the blog: heydollvintagemag.blogspot.co.uk

Last but not in the very least, a massive THANK YOU goes to all you darling readers for your continued support and kind participation in the Giveaway...to Belinda for offering such a lovely prize...as well as Bunny and Brittany for allowing me to be in 'Hey Doll!' magazine's readers corner. Congratulations to Deborah again and I shall be in contact very soon! Also a big welcome to the new followers of 'Walking In May'...here's wishing all you lovely darlings a fabulous weekend!



Until the next time,
May xx

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Giveaway Prize: The SIGNED copy of 'Style Me Vintage' by Belinda Hay!

For the Lady that was Baroness Thatcher....

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My darlings….I shall not bore you with a long biography of Baroness Thatcher’s life, as I am pretty certain that you can find that plastered across many a places right now. But I will be admittedly biased, as some of you darlings might remember that she is indeed a hero of mine. Now don't get me wrong, I am not political and nowhere as ambitious as the great lady herself...truth be told I am also not the strongest of persons, preferring gentleness wherever possible and crying quite easily when saddened ...but perhaps this is why I admire her so. One only needs to reflect on how our Prime Ministers have entered their term of office with the vibrancy of  youth, but end up leaving 10 Downing Street looking 10 years older to understand what a tough seat it actually is. The question is...how did the great Lady Thatcher always keep her hair so coiffure perfect and manage to look pristine-ly ladylike in all circumstances? There must have been more than the widely seen hairspray, handbag and skirt suits? Let us not forget that she was indeed human and had troubles of her own to solve too...for as long as humans are in existence there will be some form of difficulty or problem to overcome....so goes the norm of life. Plus if you happen to be female and have a deep love for hats, could you imagine what it must be like to give up most of your hat collection? Perhaps what I am trying to say is....it takes inner character and strength to achieve what she did....10 actual years of Downing Street is no easy feat regardless of gender. So let us look back at what was beautiful about this amazing lady instead....plus some of her lovely handbags and hats of course!

A young Margaret Roberts....
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Becoming Mrs Thatcher....Denis and Margaret Thatcher's wedding (December 1951)
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Margaret Thatcher with her twins after being elected MP (1959)
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"Where there is discord, may we bring harmony. Where there is error, may we bring truth. Where there is doubt, may we bring faith. And where there is despair, may we bring hope." 
– Lady Thatcher's election as prime minister in 1979 (Source)

She was a woman. She might have been jabbed as the ‘Iron Lady’ many a times and even have been proud to have that title, but I have not heard many speak of the sacrifices she made as a mother, wife and woman. I am sure many might even say it was to be expected because she made a choice to go into politics and was wielding for power. But no matter how strong she may have been, she is still human and a woman with emotions. I often think that it must have been really difficult for her to leave her children to represent her country in far away lands, going to meetings that drilled into evenings thereby preventing dinners with her family, missing her children’s school play to attend some other official ceremony, losing her personal identity to create a solid image that could not be bullied and constantly battling with men who see her no more than a mere shrieking woman. If there ever was a glass ceiling for women, she broke it with every tooth, nail, handbag, hat, glove, pearl and skirt suit she had…she was a symbol of strength for women everywhere…including myself. She didn’t always do or say the right thing, but she brought a country out of war and unemployment…upheld the famous British stiff upper lip in the face of blatant terrorism….and bred fear in many a macho men who managed more talk than action themselves. How can you not applaud such a great lady with respect?

Source




My favourite Lady Thatcher quote always manages to make me smile, sit a little more upright and somehow hold my head with feigned confidence; "Being powerful is like being a lady. If you have to tell people you are, you aren't." Regardless of public criticism, she was an inspiration and role model for many females across the globe. It is sad to think how there is yet to be a lady like Baroness Thatcher and our future generations may not come to learn about her life or achievements. Here's to remembering a pioneer and a remarkable lady....may she rest in peace and always be remembered for the goodness she instilled. Lastly, I hope I have not bored you darlings too much with my thoughts on Lady Thatcher....as my 1920s party at the Candlelight Club looms closer and the new ballet term is set to begin tomorrow, I look forward to a busy month ahead! Have a fabulous week my lovely darlings!


Until the next time,
May xx

Please help ‘Walking In May’ grow by clicking to:
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*Interesting further reads:
www.itv.com/news/2013-04-08/margaret-thatcher-from-grantham-to-downing-street
www.guardian.co.uk/fashion/fashion-blog/2013/apr/08/margaret-thatcher-look-pearls-handbag
www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2011/12/19/the-language-of-margaret-thatcher-s-handbags
www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2013/apr/08/margaret-thatcher-quotes
www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/04/08/margaret-thatcher-women-quotes-iron-lady
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