Li traditional clothing is famous for its exquisite brocade weaving, one of Chinas oldest textile traditions. Women wear distinctive tubular skirts with intricate geometric patterns and shell jewelry.
Key Features of Li Attire
- Finely woven Li brocade with complex geometric patterns
- Womens short fitted jackets with colorful embroidered front panels
- Tubular skirts with intricately patterned woven bands
- Extensive shell, bead, and silver jewelry worn in multiple strands
- Mens front-fastening jackets with fine fabric and minimal decoration
Traditional Garments
Women wear a short collarless jacket tied with strings showing an embroidered chest panel, paired with a tubular skirt with horizontal woven pattern bands. Men wear collarless front-fastening jackets with loose trousers.
Headwear and Adornments
Women wear their hair in a bun secured with a bone or silver hairpin. Some subgroups wear bamboo wide-brimmed hats for sun protection.
Embroidery and Decorative Arts
Li brocade uses a distinctive waist-loom technique for complex geometric patterns including human figures, ancestral symbols, and frogs. Double-face embroidery is a prized skill.
Li brocade represents what textile historians call a library woven in thread - each geometric motif encodes ancestral knowledge about cosmology, marriage, and lineage predating written language in Hainan.
Color Symbolism
Black and dark blue dominate base garments. Brocade uses vibrant red, yellow, green, white, and blue. Coral and shell add natural tones.
Festival Attire
During the March Third Festival (Sanyuesan), women wear their finest Li brocade skirts with the most intricate woven patterns and full shell jewelry sets.
Modern Influence and Preservation
Li brocade is inscribed on Chinas national intangible cultural heritage list and has been exhibited internationally.
Did You Know?
The Li were the first people to cultivate coconuts on Hainan Island over 3,000 years ago, and their skirts often feature a coconut tree motif woven into the brocade.