Square Silk Scarf With Swinging Festival 52$ Square Silk Scarf With Swinging Festival Size: 70x70cm Material: 100% premium silk The product has a box and a premium Coucher paper bag attached.
Silk square with Swinging Festival motifs – Vietnamese and international cultural interference. Swinging is a folk game that originated from the north and appeared very early in the 12th century. Swinging is usually held during Tet holidays and is one of the spring festivals that attracts many local people and Foreign tourists. The idea of swing originated from the custom of praying of the sun and moon gods in the festival of farmers. They pray that humans and all things will flourish and grow. In
addition, Swinging Festival has a sacred meaning to pray for rain and wind in the new year, while helping people participate in health training. Moreover, this is also an opportunity for people to meet together, bless each other and preserve traditional beauty that previous generations left. Candidates will compete in the form of knockout matches, the pair of men and women or young men will play alone. Candidates must create momentum so as to swing as high as possible. The player’s hand that touches the red flag will win. When participating, the contestants will have to wear traditional costumes that contribute to expressing a unique and colorful ethnic costume culture. A meaningful message of harmony and attachment in the East-West culture that Nhasilk wants to send to international friends is cleverly expressed through the scenery of Swinging Fesival on the background of traditional silk. Nhasilk has launched a silk square scarf with motifs of Swinging Festival with the image of a couple (Vietnamese man and a foreign woman) performing a swinging action smoothly and smoothly, surrounded by hope waiters of spectators with many other traditional costumes of Vietnam. Not only that, the delicate combination between the lotus pattern and the image of the gold chain is the symbol of the national flower of Vietnam and the modern Western pattern as an affirmation of deep attachment.