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60年代 - 香江霓虹·六十年代香港针织纯棉抽象格纹古董旗袍 | 1960s - Hong Kong Neon: A 1960s Hong Kong Vintage Cheongsam in Knitted Cotton with Abstract Plaid Pattern
60年代 - 香江霓虹·六十年代香港针织纯棉抽象格纹古董旗袍 | 1960s - Hong Kong Neon: A 1960s Hong Kong Vintage Cheongsam in Knitted Cotton with Abstract Plaid Pattern
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六十年代香港产格纹印花古董旗袍:针织上的时光密码
这件藏品以针织纯棉面料为载体,
从剪裁看,这件旗袍完美诠释了《南华早报》
这件旗袍的格纹密码,实为中西美学的“创造性误读”。苏轼《
当指尖抚过这经纬交错的格纹,触摸的不仅是六十年的时光尘埃,
🧵 The Time Code Woven in Knitwear: A 1960s Hong Kong Vintage Cheongsam with Plaid Print
This collectible piece uses knitted pure cotton fabric as its medium, transforming the traditional plaid pattern into a soft visual poem. Its color spectrum subtly conceals the charm of the Lingnan region: dark green like the verdant Lantau Mountain, lake blue like the tide of Victoria Harbour, ochre yellow like the sunset on Nathan Road, interspersed with silver-grey speckles reminiscent of a Hong Kong night rain.
Particularly exquisite is the technique of creating a "balance of strength and softness" in the supple cotton by varying the density of the knit loops: the vertical stripes are as crisp as bamboo splints, while the horizontal color blocks drape like silk. This technique was only seen in high-end bespoke cheongsams in Hong Kong knitting factories during the 1960s.
In terms of tailoring, this cheongsam perfectly embodies the "Hong Kong Silhouette" described in a 1963 South China Morning Post fashion column: the shoulders are narrowed by 1.5 cm to accentuate the collarbone, and the waistline is raised to the edge of the costal arch, complemented by a double-slit design at the side hem.
The plaid code of this cheongsam is, in fact, a "creative misreading" of East-West aesthetics. Su Shi’s poem, "A mountain seen from the side is a ridge, seen from the front is a peak," perfectly illustrates its visual mechanism: viewed from the front, the cool-toned plaid layers like the tide of Victoria Harbour; viewed from the side, the warm-toned stripes transform into the flowing light of Nathan Road's neon signs. This "variable focal point" design applied the principle of visual art's "dynamic deconstruction" earlier than Yves Saint Laurent's 1965 "Mondrian Dress."
When fingertips trace the interwoven plaid, one touches not only sixty years of temporal dust but also a condensed epic of Hong Kong fashion history.
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