September 11, 2009

Cheng Minghua's gold-winning menswear design. (The Epoch Times)

(Clearwisdom.net) NEW YORK--As designer Cheng Minghua stepped onto the stage to receive her award, flanked by a lithe male model wearing the gold-winning outfit--her gold-winning outfit--one could easily tell that Cheng was in shock. The silent Cheng, petite and dressed modestly in a slate-gray suit, could barely muster a grin as she accepted her trophy, looking as if she were in a dream.

She hadn't thought she'd win, she confided later. In fact, she didn't think of the competition at all as she prepared to enter this year's NTDTV Global Han Couture Design Competition.

"My thought was very simple," she said. "This competition is about the revival of traditional Chinese dress (also called Han dress), and the ancients' clothing was about virtue. They were simple and pure-minded like children, and so the clothes they wore looked natural on them."

Her entries were few in number: just three ensembles, all menswear. One outfit was in the Tang style and two in the style of the Ming Dynasty. One Ming outfit was for a nobleman, the other for a scholar, and the Tang outfit was done in the style of an ordinary man.

Seeing her creations is a striking experience, not because the work is novel in style somehow, but because it seems to unlock your hidden memory of simpler times. Using earth tones--dust brown, steel gray, indigo, and ivory--and very organic hemp/cotton blends, Cheng's designs shone with inner strength, not outward ostentation.

The Beijing native resides in San Francisco, where, she laments, "Fabric stores are few." She visited all the ones she knew a few times, never leaving the Bay Area.

Chen Ying's silver-winning formalwear design. (The Epoch Times)

"When I was matching fabrics, I didn't think much of the color combinations I was able to make, only that they were passable," Cheng said. But what resulted when she finished the pieces surprised her. "When it came together, the spirit really came out."

For Cheng, the entire process was one of learning. "As I understand, it's about the process of clothesmaking; not the result. If you do it right, the moment you flip it right side out, it'll be exactly as you wish. Without understanding fully what I was doing, I wouldn't cut the cloth."

Cheng spoke about her work. She completely absorbed herself in the details of Han clothing. To create works of authenticity, she scoured ancient paintings and old books for reference.

Meiyun Tsai's bronze-winning piece. (The Epoch Times)

"The outer garment," she would explain, gesturing to her model, "is called a beizi, and is stiffer than the inner garment. ...And the hat is a Su Dongpo hat..." She recited a few lines from a text she encountered in her research. "So I followed those words and made it with four corners using a double-layered mesh."

While learning about ancient tailoring methods, she learned a lot about herself, too: "I used to do modern clothes, but when I do Han clothing, each time it's like I've been washed clean, purified."

Award Winners List

Gold: $10,000
Cheng Minghua (USA)--Flow in Han Style

Silver: $5,000
Chen Ying (USA)--Tracing Antiquity

Bronze: $2,000
Meiyun Tsai (Taiwan)--Breeze of the Ancient Road

Special Awards: $2,000
For technique: Winna Lin (China)
For garment matching: Ya-Chi Chan (Taiwan)
For menswear: Yuan Li, Ying-zi Cai (Japan)

Honorable Mentions:
Hung-Shuang King, Cindy Chao (USA)
Rosemarie Fruehauf (Germany)
Alecia Allan Vanderbilt (USA)
Lisa Chen, Aifang Yuan (USA)
Miaomiao Cao (France)
Mei-Niang Zhu (Taiwan)
Salina Tsai, Susan Huang (USA)
Mei-Chih Lai (Taiwan)
Yi-Hsiu Lin (Taiwan)

source: http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/22377/