Hanfu men's wear generally needs sleeves longer than fingertips and ankles, so it is advisable not to mop the floor and expose the upper slightly. It is not advisable to wear long sleeves and short clothes. The size should be wide and fit, not too cramped.
Hanfu tailoring requires front and back center seams, and sleeves are generally required.
Clothing (pronounced "Chang") category
Also known as the bottom of the coat. Topcoat is one of the earliest garment forms in China, and it is the first pattern of Hanfu system. The top is tied with a collar, and the bottom is surrounded by a piece, all of which are tied with belts, which is also the most basic feature of Hanfu.
Deep clothing system (clothing system)
Clothes and skirts are connected together, cut separately but sewn up and down, hence the name because the quilt is deep. Its characteristic is to make the body hidden and elegant. Also known as "robes".
Diagrams of deep clothing in a broad sense and deep clothing in a narrow sense;
Quluanpao
A rolled robe is a kind of deep clothes. The back skirt is lengthened and the lengthened skirt forms a triangle. Ququ is divided into single winding, double winding and triple winding according to the number of winding cycles. According to the length of clothes, it can be divided into Long song and short songs. Generally, there is a waist belt and a thin belt.
Straight robe
Zhiluan is a deep-seated costume in China's costume culture system, which appeared as early as the Western Han Dynasty, but it can't be used as a formal dress. Straight robes are usually a uniform, not a dress.
Zhuzi Shen Yi
Zhu's deep clothes, a kind of deep clothes in Hanfu, are commonly used dresses in sacrificial occasions. It is the product of Zhu's self-understanding and research on the deep clothes recorded in the Book of Rites.
The structural characteristics of Zhu Shen-sleeve clothes are: straight collar (similar to double-breasted) and cross collar, with twelve skirts at the lower part, all of which are trapezoidal.
General cutting course
General cutting refers to a shape that is cut straight without seams between upper and lower clothes.
Tang round neck
Generally, it is collarless or micro-upright, with a tight neckline (the neckline gradually expands in the later period), buttons on the side and under the chest, slits on both sides of the straight lapel, short body and narrow sleeves. Wear a medium-sized dress with a stiff half arm, a belt, trousers and boots.
Song round neck
There are both stand-up collars and wide collars, which are larger than the neckline in the early Tang Dynasty, slightly revealing underwear, and the body is loose and lengthened. The front is no longer straight, but inclined to the side. It is also a cloth button, with slits at both sides and wide and narrow cuffs. It's still straight sleeves and a belt.
Open round neck
Most of them are wide collars, with a wide body, buttons at the neckline, laces at the skirt, pipa sleeves at the sleeves and hidden pendulums at both sides.
A loose robe worn by a monk or Taoist priest
There are no clothes on both sides of the straight hem, so the pants inside can be exposed when moving.
Straight body
The straight barrel is covered by the hem, but the hem is sewn on the outside, so you can see the hem.
Daoist/Taoist robe
The robe is sewn inside, which means it is hidden. Taoist robes refer to a style of Hanfu in Hanfu system, not Taoist robes.