Festival & Culture
Fine-arts and handicraft
Vietnamese Silk - a national treasure | Vietnamese Silk - a national treasure |
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The main road is surrounded by greenery and ponds, and colourful bolts of silk drying on the road. In fact, the village's fine silk, commonly known as Ha Dong Silk, has inspired many poets and composers to write about its beauty. The village is busy with activity and one can hear the sound of the newer power-looms in every home. The days of working strenuously with traditional, manual looms are gone, and the village's weavers each operate three large power-looms with a small electric motor. Thieu Hoa liked weaving, and she often travelled outside the palace to teach people to farm silkworms and the fine art of weaving. When Thieu Hoa reached the age to marry, her father wanted to marry her to a teacher. Thieu Hoa asked the King to delay the wedding and moved to Co Sat village to live, and there she taught people to weave while she worked as a farmer. The most famous Van Phuc product is lua van, van means cloud in Chinese, since lua van billows like a cloud. The village artisans drew the idea to make lua van from flowers and the clouds the jet over bamboo thickets in the summer sky. Producing lua van is a demonstration of the skill of a silk weaver. Statistics show that 785 of all 1,343 households in Van Phuc commune take part in the craft. Silk sales generate about VND27bil and make up 63% of the commune's economy each year. |
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