The Olympic Clothing Pavilion displays a series of clothes and related materials designed and produced for the 2008 Olympic Games. They formed a beautiful landscape of this grand event, held high the Olympic ideal, and displayed the spiritual and cultural features of the people of China through unique artistic design. It is also the full embodiment of the school's teaching purpose of "combining national costume culture with modern design concepts".
address
Floor 3, Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology Complex Building, No.2 Huaying East Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing
traffic
tree trunk
Take bus 1 19, 36 1, 379, 4 19, 479, 596, 62, 674, 684 and 984 to the China-Japan Hospital Station, and walk to Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology.
subway
Take the subway 10 or 13 and get off at Shaoyaoju Station. Walk 1.4km to Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology.
brief introduction
The National Fashion Museum of Beijing Institute of Fashion Technology is the first fashion museum in China, and it is also a cultural research institution integrating collection, exhibition, scientific research and teaching. It is one of the best professional costume museums in China, with a collection of more than 65,438+00,000 pieces of costumes, ornaments and fabrics of various ethnic groups in China, as well as nearly 1,000 precious life pictures of Yi, Tibetan and Qiang people in 1930s.
There are seven exhibition halls, including the minority costume hall, the Han costume hall, the Miao costume hall, the metalworking jewelry hall, the brocade embroidery batik hall, the Olympic costume hall, and the photography hall. There is also a China traditional costume craft inheritance learning hall for young people and the public to learn, understand the traditional skills of national costumes and communicate with each other.
There are many silver ornaments in the metalworking hall, such as headdresses, earrings, necklaces, brooches, bracelets and rings, as well as silver bubbles, flowers, silver pieces and bells. There are costumes of Manchu, Mongolian, Tibetan, Oroqen, Ewenki, Uygur, Tajik, Kazak, Kirgiz, Yugur and other nationalities in the national costume museum. There are robes, dresses, dresses, lapels, lapels, lapels, lapels, lapels, lapels, lapels, dresses. Textile, embroidery and batik national costumes in the dyeing and embroidery museum.