Qiang traditional clothing is distinguished by exquisite cross-stitch embroidery, long white headscarves for women, and sheepskin vests for men. The Qiang are famous for their masterful embroidery tradition, recognized as national intangible cultural heritage.
Key Features of Qiang Attire
- Exquisite cross-stitch embroidery in geometric and floral patterns
- Long flowing white or blue headscarves for women
- Mens sheepskin or goat-hide front-fastening vests
- Womens long blue or black gowns with embroidered waistbands
- Embroidered cloth shoes (yunyun xie) with cloud-shaped toe caps
Traditional Garments
Women wear a long gown in blue or black, with the collar, cuffs, hem, and waistband heavily embroidered in colorful cross-stitch patterns. A sheepskin vest is worn over the gown for warmth. Men wear a dark front-fastening jacket over a white shirt, with a sheepskin or goat-hide vest, loose trousers, and embroidered cloth shoes with distinctive cloud-pattern toes.
Headwear and Adornments
Women wear a long white or blue cloth headscarf that wraps around the head and flows down the back, sometimes decorated with embroidered ends and silver hairpins. Men wear simple black or white head wraps, and some wear fur-trimmed caps in winter.
Embroidery and Decorative Arts
Qiang embroidery is nationally famous - masterful cross-stitch and chain-stitch in geometric patterns (diamonds, zigzags, swastikas) and stylized floral, bird, and butterfly motifs. Embroidery covers collars, cuffs, trouser cuffs, aprons, and the distinctive cloud-toed shoes.
Qiang embroidery has been described by textile scholars as writing without words - each geometric motif and floral pattern carries specific meanings that have been passed down through seventy generations of Qiang women.
Color Symbolism
Blue and black dominate base garments. Embroidery uses bright red, pink, green, yellow, blue, and white on dark fabric. Sheepskin vests in natural tan. White headscarves provide contrast.
Festival Attire
During the Qiang New Year (June 24 of lunar calendar) and the Mountain Sacrifice Festival, women wear their most heavily embroidered gowns and the widest embroidered waistbands, with full sets of silver jewelry.
Modern Influence and Preservation
Qiang embroidery is recognized as national intangible cultural heritage and is actively taught in Qiang communities. Their cross-stitch patterns influence contemporary Chinese textile and fashion design.
Did You Know?
The Qiang are one of Chinas oldest ethnic groups, descended from the ancient Qiang people mentioned in oracle bone scripts from the Shang dynasty over 3,000 years ago.