Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - Now more and more people wear Hanfu, so how to distinguish the difference between genuine Hanfu and cottage Hanfu?

Now more and more people wear Hanfu, so how to distinguish the difference between genuine Hanfu and cottage Hanfu?

On the question of how to distinguish the authenticity of Hanfu, this time I took the time to sort out a solid strategy for everyone. The girls who are struggling in the mountains will feel suddenly enlightened after reading it. Remember to collect, and pay more attention to me if you find it useful!

First, recognize the face-observe the model. The so-called "face recognition method" is to look at the models in the store. I think everyone has heard that seeing this model's face must be fake. Why are you so sure? Anyway, I have never seen her take genuine Hanfu, and it is estimated that no genuine merchant dares to let him take product drawings. It is unprecedented for a whole circle of people to know this, and it will never come again! I just heard that there are several new faces like this recently, and I can add them later.

Second, look at the watermark-see if it has been stolen. Some shanzhai shops are so arrogant that they directly use the product drawings of the original merchants, and even don't bother to leave out the watermark, so when buying Hanfu, please take a closer look at the watermark of the picture to see if there is a link to the name of this shop. If you encounter a shop like the one above, it is undoubtedly a cottage version of Hanfu. Of course, everyone should pay attention to one situation to be ruled out.

Thirdly, it is the inspection of commodity names-pay attention to whether there are inappropriate words. Words such as "ancient costume", "fairy costume", "photo studio", "ancient costume" and "imperial concubine" will never appear in the product names of genuine Hanfu shops, but some merchants like to add words such as "non-ancient costume" to increase the search volume. Look at the two examples listed below. See such a name, is it Hanfu or China element? A fairy in costume? And student clothes? This is very strange, in fact, the essence is the cottage.

Finally, look at all the treasures-pay attention to comprehensive analysis. See if you are buying other ancient costumes, such as Lolita, JK uniform, soft girl dress, bathrobe kimono, Cos dress, etc. If it is, then nine times out of ten it is a cottage shop. Look at whether the baby and the store name are "clean" and whether there are different store names on the surface, just like Sina Pavilion, Mustard Seed, Banquet Pavilion, Qinghuige, Huazi Yishui and so on in the same store name. If so, then this is a cottage shop. Read the store's comments and ask everyone for information: and the baby's name. Pay attention to what is written in "* * Family Replica", but are you "* * Family"? Or you didn't write the name of the merchant, just wrote "replica". You know, it turns out that replicas of merchants are really rare, and more than half of them are shanzhai. If you really don't know, ask someone else!