China Daily (Hong Kong)

Chinese like a mix of technology and style

- By SUN YUANQING sunyuanqin­g@ chinadaily.com.cn

been used by the Chinese to mark the Spring Festival as a symbol of good fortune.

In the 1980s, street vendors selling calendars featuring beautiful women in Beijing (above) were a common sight.

But now tastes have changed, and you see people returning to their roots, like with this Spring Festival picture competitio­n (right) in Nantong, East China’s Jiangsu province, where contestant­s draw roosters to celebrate the coming of the lunar New Year.

Weini, a young woman in Chengdu, Sichuan province, operates a wake-up service mainly targeting students and office workers, Chengdu Business Daily reported on Jan 19. Weini opened her store in 2016. Since then her business has gradually grown. As the price of her service has increased (now at 5 yuan, or $73 cents, for every call), Weini has upped the quality of her offerings, including follow-up calls and weather advisories. There are currently about 10 employees making wake-up calls during the day and night, and Weini’s store has been earning good reviews.

Film:

In 2015, when Apple Inc released watches in associatio­n with the French luxury house Hermes, it took the fashion world by storm.

The two sectors crossed paths at the Met Gala in 2016, the annual cultural extravagan­za in New York, with celebrity dresses highlighti­ng the latest in technology.

But the world’s largest market for wearable devices — appealing to geeks and fashionist­as alike — is China.

Last year, 38.76 million units of wearable gadgets were shipped in China, a 57.1 percent rise as compared with 2015, according to Internatio­nal Data Corporatio­n. The US market research company estimated such shipments would touch 50 million this year, taking the market value to more than 26 billion yuan ($3.76 billion).

Smartwatch­es were the most popular wearable devices last year and the trend is likely to continue through 2017.

Xiaomi Corp, a top Chinese phone maker, has been offering “smart wristbands” at prices as low as 69 yuan, making them accessible to a wide group of people. Connected to Xiaomi phones, the wristbands track a user’s fitness level and sleep data. With expertise in technology, such brands are trying to expand their base to more fashion-focused customers.

Misfit, a US-based wearable technology company, introduced its wrist product, Ray, a fitness-and-sleep monitor, at a Beijing fashion show in summer. Owned by Fossil Group, which makes watches for Michael Kors, Diesel, Adidas, Karl Lagerfeld and Burberry, Misfit is keen to move closer to the fashion world, co-founder Sonny Vu said in a previous interview to the paper.

“We want to make weara- ble technology that does not look like wearable technology,” he said. “We want to make products that are indistingu­ishable from jewelry.”

While digital brands are looking at style, fashion labels are incorporat­ing the elements of smart technology in their products.

Fossil launched a smart analog watch collection in the Chinese mainland last year. With their classic looks, these watches can track sleep and fitness levels of wearers as well.

Alisha Shroff, marketing director, Fossil Brand Asia Pacific, said the brand is going to emphasize fashion in order to differenti­ate itself from other technology-oriented products.

“It will look like a watch, but have the technology,” she said. “Digital is where the future is headed and where we will invest heavily.”

Chinese companies are trying to make the most of the trend, too.

Totwoo, a Beijing-based smart jewelry brand, has been emphasizin­g jewelry over technology since it was founded in 2015. Connected to a phone applicatio­n, users can greet their friends and family members who wear the brand’s jewelry, with sparkles signaling the arrival of such messages.

“This is a global opportunit­y…We want our jewelry to focus on love, identity and luck. The messages are the same, but we express them in different ways,” Wang Jieming, its co-founder and CEO, said.

But some challenges lie ahead as New York-based market research firm eMarketer has discovered. While wearable devices have quickly attracted a following of young people by offering fitness trackers and other such functions, they lack a definitive user base as they are seen struggling to offer more sophistica­ted elements in products.

 ?? XU CONGJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY ??
XU CONGJUN / FOR CHINA DAILY

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