Comb, also known as comb, is one of the eight ancient hair accessories in China. Comb (shū bì ū) is a hairdressing tool and an ancient traditional handicraft of Han nationality. Comb with sparse teeth, comb with dense teeth, comb for combing hair, comb for removing hair and dirt.
The hairpin was developed from the hairpin, which was a long needle used by the ancients to fix the bun or crown. Hairpins are the most basic tools for fixing and decorating ancient female hairstyles. The Book of the Later Han Dynasty recorded that "Huang Jinlong took the title of white pearl, and the fish moustache was one foot long, which was called hairpin".
Chai is one of the eight headdresses in ancient China. It is a kind of jewelry worn by women, made of gold, silver and jade.
It is recorded in the note of Book of Rites Quli that fifteen women are allowed to marry and twenty women are not allowed to marry. "Fu" was originally used for combing hair. A "fifteen-year-old woman", that is, even when she is fifteen, she can tie a bun and get married.
Beaded flowers are flower ornaments made of beads on women's hairstyles or clothes. Ancient women's favorite, colored beads.
Golden twinkle refers to the female jewelry embedded with golden flowers. In the late Southern Dynasty, the poem "Reward Liu Servant for Shooting Revenge" said: "The moon is bright in the ear, and gold falls on the head." Chen Xu of the Southern Dynasties: "The golden cymbals are inserted backwards, and the precious trees are painted horizontally." Wei Zhuang, a former Shu dynasty, wrote in Qingping Music: "Dressed in gold, I am ashamed to wait for the moon to swing.
Fun, commonly known as "Baotou", is called "brain" by northerners. It is a long strip with a wide middle and narrow ends, which is worn between the forehead and the eyebrows. It was originally used to protect the heads of elderly women from the cold in winter in Jiangnan and Central Plains. It was widely circulated in Ming and Qing dynasties, and was used as decoration by ladies and shelter from the cold by poor women.
Walking is a kind of jewelry worn by ancient women in China. When you walk, you will be shaken. Generally, it is a phoenix, a butterfly, with wings, or tassels, or pendants. When walking, the gold ornaments will move with the swing of walking and be lifelike. Interpretation of names and jewelry: "There will be beads hanging on it when you step on it, and it will shake when you step on it."