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DOING SHOPPING

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DOING SHOPPING Did you know that Poles import from China: 38% TV sets 37% compact equipment 38% mobile phones 80% clothes Chinese products swamp the world. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DOING SHOPPING


1
DOING SHOPPING
WHAT'S WORTH BUYING IN CHINA?
2
Did you know that
  • Poles import from China
  • 38 TV sets
  • 37 compact equipment
  • 38 mobile phones
  • 80 clothes
  • Chinese products swamp the world.

3
Typical Chinese Souvenir Shop
4
SILK AND BROCADE PRODUCTS
It was a symbol of wealth and high social status
for Romans to wear silk clothes. Nowadays, silk,
in some sense, is still some kind of luxury.
5
KINDS OF SILK
  • It is well known that silk is discovered in China
    in 30th century BC as one of the best materials
    for clothing - it has a look and feeling of
    richness that no other materials can match.
  • Chinese silk is famous in the world for its
    magnificent quality, colour and variety.
    Representative samples are brocade from Hangzhou,
    Sichuan brocade from Chengdu, the fine, tough
    silk and pure silk crepe from Suzhou and tussah
    silk from Dandong.

6
SILKWORM BREEDING
  • The business of raising silkworms and unwinding
    cocoons is now known as silk culture or
    sericulture. It takes an average of 25-28 days
    for a silkworm, which is no bigger than an ant,
    to grow old enough to spin cocoon. Then the women
    farmers will pick them up one by one to piles of
    straws, then the silkworm will attach itself to
    the straw, with its legs to the outside and begin
    to spin.
  • The next step is unwinding the cocoons it is
    done by reeling girls. The cocoons are heated to
    kill the pupa, this must be done at the right
    time, otherwise, the pupas are bound to turn into
    moths, and moths will make a hole in the cocoons,
    which will be useless for reeling. To unwind the
    cocoons, first put them in a basin filled with
    hot water, find the loose end of the cocoon, and
    then twist them, carry then to a small wheel,
    thus the cocoons will be unwound. At last, two
    workers measure them into a certain length, twist
    them, they are called raw silk, then they are
    dyed and woven into cloth.
  • An interesting fact is that we can unwind about
    1,000 meters long silk. from one cocoon, while
    111 cocoons are needed for a man's tie and 630
    cocoons are needed for a woman's blouse

7
COCOONERY
Mulberry tree
8
Silk quilts
9
CHINESE CERAMICS
10
SOUVENIRS- PORCELAINE FIGURINES
Polychrome-glazed pottery-dominant colours
green, yellow and white
11
Pottery vs Porcelain
Pottery - ordinary clay with iron content
higher than 3, burned at temp. below 1000
degrees Celsius with no glaze. Porcelain
porcelain Stone and clay with iron content lower
than 3, Temp.above 1200 deg.Cel. With high
temperature glaze over 1200 degrees Centigrade.
Bronze and clay pottery
12
CHINESE PORCELAIN
  • Porcelain is generally believed to have
    originated in China. Although proto-porcelain
    wares exist dating from the Shang Dynasty, by the
    Eastern Han Dynasty (100-200 CE) high firing
    glazed ceramic wares had developed into
    porcelain, and porcelain manufactured during the
    Tang Dynasty period (618906) was exported to the
    Islamic world where it was highly prized.2
    Early porcelain of this type includes the
    tri-color glazed porcelain, or sancai wares.
    Historian S.A.M. Adshead writes that true
    porcelain items in the restrictive sense that we
    know them today could be found in dynasties after
    the Tang,3 during the Song Dynasty, Yuan
    Dynasty, Ming Dynasty, and Qing Dynasty.
  • By the Sui and Tang dynasties, porcelain had
    become widely produced. Eventually, porcelain and
    the expertise required to create it began to
    spread into other areas by the seventeenth
    century, it was being exported to Europe.

13
PORCELAIN FACTORY
14
CHINESE PORCELAIN PRODUCTS
15
CHINESE CLOISONNE
  • Cloisonne, named as enamelware, have originated
    in Beijing of Yuan dynasty and prevailed during
    the period of Ming dynasty (1450 1456). Its
    typically called Blue of Jingtai as blue was
    the dominant colour used for enameling.
  • Cloisonne ware was used only for the royal family
    as it was the symbol of authority and status.

Cloisonne is the everlasting art. And loved by
the people of the world
16
CHINESE TABLEWARE
with under and over-glaze painting
17
Painted Crystal Ball
18
TIGER SHOES
19
FURNITURE MADE FROM LACQUER TREE
20
LACQUER WARE
  • Asian lacquer ware is well known to art
    collectors worldwide, and is the result of some
    of the finest craftsmanship techniques in the
    world. Lacquer ware is created by applying
    lacquer to wooden objects to give it a fine
    finish and luster. Although the craft was
    developed in both China and Japan, Japanese
    craftsmen are generally credited with taking
    Chinese lacquer techniques and maturing them to
    create the highly regarded art form that lacquer
    ware creation has become today.

21
JEWELLERY- PEARL
22
PEARL
  • Most of the pearls you'll find in China are
    freshwater pearls, cultivated in mollusks in
    lakes and rivers. Their shape can be elongated
    and their appearance milky translucent.
    Freshwater pearls are certainly the real value
    when buying pearls in China, but sea water and
    South Sea pearls are also good values. In
    addition to pearls, there's seemingly no end to
    the semi-precious stones you can add to designs,
    such as jade and turquoise, as well as
    inexpensive crystal and plastic beads.

23
Pearl Breeding Institute
24
JADE WARE
Jade is used to make ritual implements,
ceremonial and decorative objects, wearing
ornaments, burial objects
as well as daily utensils.
25
ANCIENT CHINESE JADE
  • A Symbol of Wealth and Power jade wares were
    owned by the upper class in ancient China.
  • An Envoy of Religious Deities jade could be a
    link between human beings and gods, so had a
    special function to get rid of evils was worn
    as an amulet.
  • A Mark of Morality Chinese related the natural
    qualities of jade with human morality as
    Confucius claimed that jade had the qualities of
    wisdom, justice, courtesy, loyalty, happiness,
    trustworthiness and benevolence.
  • China, a country with an abundant deposit of
    jade, is well known for its special art of jade
    carving. The tradition started early in the
    Neolithic period and the carving techniques were
    very unique and advanced.

26
HAND-WOVEN AND EMBROIDERED PICTURES
27
SILK WEAVING PLANT
Silk fabric can be woven by machine or
embroidered by hand. There are about five Schools
of embroidering art. There are 2 types of
embroidery cross (in Suzhou) and knot (in
Chengdu). It takes 1 -3 months to make a picture,
a weaving machine makes 1.5 cm a day.
28
MEDICAMENTS
Natural products have been used for medicinal
purposes since ancient times. These include
materials from plant, animal, and mineral
sources, with the majority derived from
plants. Nearly 5,000 species of plants are used
for medicine in China today, a fact that is of
high interest to western medical researchers and
pharmaceutical companies. Two examples Chinese
do research on activity against HIV and malaria.
29
ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
30
TEA SHOPS
  • China is the home of tea. Tea is divided into
    green, black, perfumed, white and Wulong tea.
    Longjing (green tea) and Biluochun (green tea),
    are famous throughout the world.

31
HONG KONG- ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT
32
OTHER EQUIPMENT
33
USEFUL TIPS
  • Before you leave for Chinese shopping spree,
    keep in mind the following pieces of advice
  • Bargaining is advisable
  • Be careful of fake products
  • Beware of viruses when buying piratical
    (illegal)software
  • GOOD LUCK! ITS WORTH ITS PRICE

34
Useful phrases
  • magnificent quality- wspaniala jakosc
  • samples- próbki
  • silkworm breeding- hodowla jedwabnika
  • a pile of straw- stos slomy
  • to spin- przasc
  • unwinding the cocoons- rozwijanie kokonów
  • a pupa- poczwarka
  • a moth- mol
  • raw silk- surowy jedwab
  • a mulberry tree- morwowe drzewo
  • a tableware- zastawa stolowa
  • laquer ware- wyroby z laki
  • a luster- polysk, blask
  • a freshwater pearl- perla slodkowodna
  • mollusks- mieczaki

35
  • translucent- pólprzezroczysty
  • semi-precious stones- pólszlachetne kamienie
  • Jade- nefryt
  • an envoy- wyslannik
  • a deity- bóstwo
  • a wisdom- madrosc
  • a benevolence- laskawosc, dobrodziejstwo
  • abundant- liczny
  • a carving- rzezba
  • throughout the world- wszedzie na swiecie
  • to swamp the world- zalewac swiat
  • elongated- wydluzony
  • craftsmanship- kunsztowny

36
Authors Joanna Madura Danuta Mironska European
Club I Liceum Ogolnoksztalcace Mielec, Poland
Source Personal photos Impressions Internet
Pascal guide-book
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