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Hair embroidery, a
traditional Chinese art, is a special needle work of
making patterns on silk with human hair as the thread.
As Chinese hair is mostly black, it used to be known
also as moxiu (¡°black ink¡± embroidery).
Today the art excels by far i ts past attainment in color
and in variety. The color is no longer limited to black.
Others, such as blonde, amber, auburn, white and gray,
are also used, totaling dozens of tones, mostly
collected from areas of ethnic minorities. Occasionally,
to give the lips of an ancient beauty their usual rosiness, white hair may be dyed red. But on the whole,
pictures embroidered with hair are in its natural hues.
To work with human hair is more difficult than with silk
thread, for compared with the latter Chinese hair is
stiff, slippery and brittle, breaking easily when
stretched with exertion. It requires a well-trained
skill but it is also rewarding in the end-product, which
is elegantly neat, erosion-free, worm-resistant and fast
in color. |