Blogroll
- China Fashion Bloggers An Aggregator for Chinese Fashion Blogs
RSS for chinesepeoplehavenostyle
Top Posts on chinesepeoplehavenostyle
Archives of chinesepeoplehavenostyle
Categories on chinesepeoplehavenostyle
Tag Cloud for chinesepeoplehavenostyle
Artistic Bare Belly Best Dressed Generation Bikes Bund Burberry Chinese Designers Chinese Fashion History Chinese People Clash Color Conspicuous Consumption Content Context Cultural Imperialists Domestic Development French Concession Fuxing Park Gen X Gen Y Guangzhou Hair Hats Historical Homogenizing Forms Hong Kong Imitation Jing An Jing An District Just for Fun Literal Louis Vuitton Murse Old Primitive Consumption Series Shanghai Fashion Week Style Stylish Thesis Top 10 Top 10 of 2010 Uma Wang Xin Tian Di Yunnan
Tag Archives: Domestic Development
Exception de MixMind 15th Anniversary Show, Guangzhou
Have you noticed the changes I made to the blog title? After taking heat about it for two years (including the previous incarnation) and the street style situation changing pretty drastically in China (for the better), I’ve decided to make … Continue reading
Posted in Chinese Designers, Domestic Development, Exception de MixMind, Fashion Shows, Guangzhou, Just for Fun
Tagged Chinese Fashion Designers, Chinese Fashion Shows, Domestic Development, Exception de MixMind, Exception de MixMind 15th Anniversary Fashion Show, Guangzhou, Opera House in Guangzhou, Zaha Hadid, 例外, 例外秀
3 Comments
CPHNS and Exception de MixMind 例外 Anniversaries, Part 二
So I should expand on my previous [double] anniversary post, as it was written in a rush and didn’t really give you a good picture of what I’ve been documenting and analyzing for the past two years in China (it’s … Continue reading
Posted in Cultural Heritage, Decoster Concept, Domestic Development, Exception de MixMind, Fashion History, Fashion System, Just for Fun, Primitive Consumption, Style, Thesis, Uma Wang, Video
Tagged 15 Year Anniversary of Exception de MixMind, 1st Year Anniversary, Chinese Fashion Industry, Chinese Fashion System, Chinese Street Style, Chinese Style, Cultural Heritage, Do Chinese People Have Style?, Domestic Development, Exception de MixMind, First Designer Brand in China, Statistics, Style, Video, 例外, 例外秀
1 Comment
Fashion Week Part II: Jenny Ji, Helen Lee, and Decoster Concept Rehearsal
So Shanghai Fashion Week went by pretty fast, probably because the weather was terrible so I didn’t make it to many shows… But I managed to make it to most of the domestic Chinese designer brands, which included a lot … Continue reading
Posted in Chinese Designers, Context, Decoster, Decoster Concept, Domestic Development, Exception de MixMind, Fashion Shows, Fuxing Park, Helen Lee, Jenny Ji, Model, Shanghai Fashion Week, Shanghai Fashion Week, Spring/Summer 2012, SS12, Zhou Yuan
Tagged Alex Winston, CHairEYES, Chen Xiang, Context, Debut Collections, Decoster Concept, Domestic Development, Exception de MixMind, Fuxing Park, Helen Lee, iPhone, Jenny Ji, La Vie, Leaf Greener, Literal, Ma Ke, Pablo Morales, Shanghai Fashion Week, Sister Wife, SS12, Wedding Dress
Leave a comment
The Chinese Dandy, French Concession
I love dandies, but I don’t like the way Wikipedia describes them. They portray dandies as middle class people who would imitate the upper class because they wanted or longed to be of that status, but that’s not how I … Continue reading
Posted in Androgynous, Arbitration, Artistic, Best Dressed Generation, Bikes, Chinese People, Conspicuous Consumption, Dandies, Democratization, Domestic Development, Fashion System, Fashion Theory, Gen X, Gen Y, Imitation, Shang Xia, Social Integration, Socks, Stylish, Thesis, Xu Hui District
Tagged Androgynous, Arbitration of Taste, Aristocracy, Artistic, Bamboo, Best Dressed Generation, Bikes, Conspicuous Consumption, Dandy, Democratization, Domestic Development, Fashion Theory, Gen X, Gen Y, Gentleman, Imitation, Shang Xia, Social Integration, Social Stratification, Socks, Stylish, Suits, Taste vs. Money, Top Down Dissemination, Yunnan
5 Comments
Shanghai’s First Fashion’s Night Out, Xin Tian Di
Last year China’s official FNO was in Beijing (as Vogue is based there), but this year China’s most stylish Gen Y-ers flocked to Infinity Plaza in Shanghai for the shopping portion of the event, and later made their way to … Continue reading
Posted in Artistic, Best Dressed Generation, Chinese Designers, Chinese People, Contemporary Chinese Aesthetics, Content, Cultural Heritage, Domestic Development, Fashion System, Festive, Gen Y, Huai Hai Road, Just for Fun, Kim Kiroic, Model, Patriotic, Stylish, Uma Wang, Xin Tian Di
Tagged Artistic, Best Dressed Generation, Chinese People, Contemporary Chinese Aesthetics, Content, Cow Suit, Cultural Heritage, Domestic Designers, Domestic Development, Dong Liang, Fashion System, Fashion's Night Out China, Festive, Gen Y, Infinity Plaza, Juun J., Kim Kiroic, Model, Patriotic, Shanghai FNO, Stylish, Tips, Uma Wang, Vogue China, Xin Tian Di
3 Comments
Not Mainlanders (but kinda), Hong Kong
My trip to Hong Kong was short but enlightening and inspiring. They certainly have their own sense of style in Hong Kong, but I don’t think it’s as drastically different as most people make it out to be… It seems … Continue reading
Posted in Back, Bags, Burberry, Chinese Designers, Chinese People, Clash, Conspicuous, Conspicuous Consumption, Context, Counterfeits, Cultural Imperialists, Domestic Development, Homogenizing Forms, Hong Kong, Joseph Li, Kids, Louis Vuitton, Old, Peripheral Monogrammed Goods, Ruxury, Stratification, Stylish
Tagged Back, Bags, Burberry, Chinese Designers, Chinese People, Clash, Conspicuous, Conspicuous Consumption, Counterfeits, Cultural Imperialists, Domestic Development, Gareth Pugh, Gucci, Homogenizing Forms, Hong Kong, Joseph Li, JOYCE, Kids, Kowloon, Louis Vuitton, Mainland China, Old, Peripheral Monogrammed Goods, Pitti Immagine, Ruxury, Show Studio, Social Stratification, Stylish
9 Comments
True Colors 本色, Guangzhou
Apologies for my absence over the past few days, but I’ve been in Guangzhou without access to a VPN or proxy, so I’ve been unable to blog since WordPress is blocked in China… But I arrived in Hong Kong this … Continue reading
Posted in Clash, Color, Context, Domestic Development, Exception de MixMind, Guangzhou, Literal, Ma Ke, Rain and Snow, Ricostru
Tagged Avatar, Clash, Color, Context, Domestic Development, Exception de MixMind, Great Firewall of China, Guangzhou, Harry Potter, Hong Kong, Literal, Ma Ke, Rain and Snow, Ricostru, True Color, VPN, Wordpress, 本色
6 Comments
Post 105: The CLASH
This final post of my 100th Post Countdown of Shanghai’s Top 5 Sartorial Trends will break down what Shanghai’s style is all about, but first I wanted to point out that I’ve made Maleonn‘s beautiful illustration of 20th Century Chinese … Continue reading
Posted in Artistic, Bund, Burberry, Children, Chinese People, Clash, Color, Conspicuous Consumption, Context, Cultural Imperialists, Domestic Development, Huai Hai Road, Jing An District, Louis Vuitton, Lu Wan District, Old, People's Square, Style, Stylish, Xin Tian Di, Xu Hui District, Xu Jia Hui
Tagged 100th Post, 20th Century Chinese Fashion History, Adoption vs. Adaption, Artistic, Bird and Flower Market, Bund, Burberry, Children, Chinese People, Chinese Style, Clash, Clashers, Clashing, Color, Communism vs. Capitalism, Conspicuous Consumption, Conspicuous Logos, Context, Convention vs. Progress, Cultural Imperialism, Domestic Development, East vs. West, EFP, French Concession, Globalization, Huai Hai Road, Ikea, Jing An, Leopard, Louis Vuitton, Lu Wan, Maleonn, Mao-Bot, Native vs. Foreign Culture, Old, People's Square, Psychological Schema, Rich vs. Poor, Shanghai Look, Shanghai Style, Shanghai's Top 5 Sartorial Trends, Style, Stylish, Surrealist, Thesis, Tradition vs. Modernity, Xin Tian Di, Xu Jia Hui
14 Comments


