The Silhouette
Intangible Heritage Craft Points
Heritage textile details, finishing notes and limited-batch positioning for the luxury product template.
Inheriting the national intangible cultural heritage Suzhou Song brocade ancient weaving technology, natural mulberry silk is selected and twisted with golden colored threads to weave the traditional pattern of "Pegasus riding on auspicious clouds", which is restored from the palace brocade bag pattern of the Song Dynasty. The dark blue brocade background is lined with red and blue auspicious clouds and a white horse. The texture is three-dimensional and full. The gold thread has its own fine flow under the light, abandoning cheap digital printing. It is equipped with flexible black TPU fully covered soft edges, and the real machine mold is used to open the holes accurately, taking into account the intangible cultural heritage aesthetics and daily protection. The silk Song brocade fabric is skin-friendly, non-slip, blocks fingerprints, and is gentle and delicate to hold. The thousand-year-old brocade hidden in ancient books and royal accessories has been transformed into a national-style good thing that you can carry with you every day. It is elegant for personal use and full of auspicious meanings for gifts.
Song brocade began in the Suzhou Weaving House in the Southern Song Dynasty. In ancient times, it was a royal brocade material. It was mostly used for emperors' pouches, calligraphy and painting framing, and palace ornaments. It is one of China's three famous brocades and an intangible cultural heritage of mankind. The pattern of the Pegasus riding on the clouds is derived from the original Song brocade pattern of the Ming and Qing Dynasties. In ancient times, it was a special decoration for the royal family's pockets: the Pegasus riding on the auspicious clouds, which means immediate success, prosperity, and everything goes smoothly. Intangible cultural heritage craftsmen follow the ancient method of weaving brocade noodles through more than 20 processes, from silk reeling and dyeing to cross-stitch knotting and shuttle throwing on the machine. The output of hand-woven fabrics is rare. The designer dug deep into the patterns of ancient brocade and condensed the entire Song brocade into a small square inch of a phone case. The palace Song brocade, which was dusty in museums, jumped out of ancient books and warehouses and entered into the daily lives of modern people. The thousand-year brocade context can be grasped at a glance.
- Inspired by Chinese intangible heritage weaving and Silk Road ornament.
- Hand-finished surface made in small batches for visual consistency.
- Designed to match charms, bags and gift sets from the same pattern family.



