China Daily

Embroidery helps stitch handsome profits

Miao patterns preserve tradition, raise incomes in mountainou­s regions thanks to automation, craftsmans­hip

- By ZHU WENQIAN and YANG JUN in Guiyang Contact the writers at zhuwenqian@chinadaily.com.cn

Wei Zuying, a native of Southwest China’s mountainou­s Guizhou province and a deputy to the 13 th National People’s Congress, said embroidery is inherently part of the culture of the Miao ethnic group, and she hopes the skill can be passed down over generation­s.

Wei, 40, an inheritor of an intangible cultural heritage designatio­n for embroidery, started working at a clothing factory in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, two decades ago. She worked there for more than 10 years and was deeply impressed by the modern equipment and automation there, even as she was engaged in an activity traditiona­lly reliant on manual labor.

In 2011, she returned to her hometown and bought a used automated embroidery machine. With an initial investment of 200,000 yuan ($ 29,700), she opened her own embroidery workshop in Maan village, Cong jiang county, Guizhou.

A niche has since developed for embroidery in Congjiang. Wei and other designers now create new templates every year, and she tends to blend traditiona­l Miao patterns with modern styles. The factory has made it possible for impoverish­ed women in the village to both work near home and increase their incomes.

Over the years, an entreprene­urial spirit has been growing in Maan — formerly a source of a great deal of migrant workers. Some former employees who worked at Wei’s factory have even establishe­d their own factories and become their own bosses.

“Embroidery has become a major business in Maan. The streets are filled with the sound of embroidery machines, and everyone is rushing to and from work as they have a large number of orders to finish,” Wei said.

“Compared with manual embroidery that requires time and patience, embroidery machines can help quickly complete large quantities of orders and meet demand from different customers. Despite the fact that we now use machines, traditiona­l Miao embroidery culture remains the soul of these embroidere­d products,” she said.

The national culture of the Miao ethnic group should not be hidden deep in the mountains and restricted by geography, but should be promoted to wider areas nationwide, Wei added.

In Maan, there is a traditiona­l custom that when girls get married, they usually wear a new beautifull­y embroidere­d handmade dress, and they will later also wear it at major festivals. Thus, most girls in the village learn the skill from childhood, and embroidery has become an essential undertakin­g for most locals.

“At the factory, embroidere­rs

Embroidery has become a major business in Maan. The streets are filled with the sound of embroidery machines, and everyone is rushing to and from work as they have a large number of orders to finish.”

arrive daily and work with machines. Some with exceptiona­l skills can work from home and be paid based on the number of pieces they produce. The combinatio­n of mechanical and manual embroidery ensures mass production and helps pass down skilled craftsmans­hip,” Wei said.

Serving as a deputy to the 13th NPC, she hopes to help more women who live in impoverish­ed conditions to master and inherit traditiona­l embroidery skills and thus make a better living and enrich their lives. Inheritanc­e and developmen­t of national culture is her focus as a deputy, and she has felt greater responsibi­lity after taking the position of a national lawmaker.

During the annual two sessions in 2018, she put forward a proposal on how to transform the advantages of national culture into advantages of industrial growth.

Last year, she put forward proposals on building firefighti­ng facilities in villages in less developed areas in Guizhou, and constructi­ng a national highway to ease travel difficulti­es in mountainou­s regions.

Most villages are now equipped with fire trucks and the highway has been opened for traffic, which provides a road to prosperity for villagers and their products, including embroidere­d pieces of course.

With the support of the local government, Wei set up another embroidery factory at a community in Cong jiang in March. A large

Wei Zuying, a native of Guizhou province and a deputy to the 13th National People’s Congress

number of villagers moved to flats in town from their rural homes, and they received profession­al training before landing jobs as embroidere­rs.

They live above the factory, thus making it convenient for them to look after children.

The 6,000- square- meter workshop has 26 large- scale embroidery machines and 120 sewing machines. It mainly produces traditiona­l clothing, shoes and silver ornaments unique to the Miao ethnic group. The products are sold to Guizhou, Guangdong, the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region and other areas.

The community factory is expected to achieve annual output value of 10 million yuan, and it plans to pay 240 female employees a combined 5.8 million yuan a year, Wei said.

Besides a brick- and- mortar store in Cong jiang that sells finished embroidere­d pieces, the factory also sells its products online through messaging app WeChat and mobile video app Kuaishou.

The average age of the factory workers is 50, and their minimum wage is set at 1,800 yuan a month, Wei said.

“Women who come from Cong jiang have attained a certain degree of mastery in craftsmans­hip since they have been doing it for many years,” said Yang Liuzhen, president of the women’s federation of Meie community, Cong jiang, who is responsibl­e for the management of Wei’s factory.

“Most women would like to find a stable job as an embroider. We give them embroidery training for about a week before they become skillful enough to do the work,” Yang said.

During the two sessions this year, what Wei cared about the most was how can younger generation­s better understand, inherit and develop national folk cultures.

“Embroidery skills and folk songs of Miao and Dong ethnic groups need promotion by experts and scholars. More importantl­y, the younger generation needs to inherit and innovate their culture. It is a long- term and arduous task as many young people do not pay attention to such things or are not that interested in traditiona­l culture,” Wei said.

Currently, China has nearly 9,500 companies engaged in making traditiona­l folk costumes, with the number increasing steadily in recent years. More than 60 percent of the total are small and mediumsize­d enterprise­s, according to data from Tianyancha, a data company providing informatio­n on Chinese enterprise­s.

Guizhou has more than 2,100 related enterprise­s, accounting for the largest portion nationwide. Guizhou is followed by the Inner Mongolia autonomous region and Yunnan province.

 ??  ??
 ?? YAO XU / CHINA DAILY ?? Employees work with embroidery machines at the workshop owned by Wei Zuying, a deputy to the 13th National People’s Congress, in Congjiang county, Guizhou province, in September.
YAO XU / CHINA DAILY Employees work with embroidery machines at the workshop owned by Wei Zuying, a deputy to the 13th National People’s Congress, in Congjiang county, Guizhou province, in September.
 ?? YAO XU / CHINA DAILY ?? An embroidere­r sews patterns with a sewing machine on a traditiona­l ribbon at Wei Zuying’s factory in Congjiang county, Guizhou province, in September.
YAO XU / CHINA DAILY An embroidere­r sews patterns with a sewing machine on a traditiona­l ribbon at Wei Zuying’s factory in Congjiang county, Guizhou province, in September.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong