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In pics: Inheritors of tiger-head shoes in E China

(Xinhua) Updated: 2016-05-23 15:26 Comments

In pics: Inheritors of tiger-head shoes in E China

Luo Jihua examines a pair of tiger-head shoes in Bengbu city, East China's Anhui province, May 20, 2016. [Photo/Xinhua]

Ding Yuan and Luo Jihua, a couple who are inheritors of tiger-head shoes, are recently worried about the future of the handicraft as fewer people would like to carry out the traditional industry.

Tiger-head shoes are an example of traditional Chinese folk handicraft used as footwear for children. Their name comes from the toe cap, which looks like the head of a tiger.

In Chinese culture, tigers are regarded as auspicious and people embroider the head and the upper of the shoes with tiger or tiger-head patterns in the hope that their children will become as robust and dynamic as tigers.

Ding Yuan and Luo Jihua can make about 100 pairs of tiger-head shoes every year, purely handmade. The complex embroidery process of tiger-head shoes has caused fewer people to keep on learning.

"It is quite possible that the tiger-head shoes would sink into oblivion with the development of modern shoe-making industry," said the couple.

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