Women of the Hezhe ethnic minority marry in dresses of fish skin sewn with
hand-twined animal tendons. Although made from primal material the finished
article has many delicate flourishes, notably fretworked mosaics around the
sleeves and waist.

But why make a wedding dress out of fish skin? This is a cultural feature of
the Hezhe minority, also called the "Fish Skin Tribe," the only ethnic minority
to have cultivated the technique of fish skin dress making.

Great care is taken when preparing the material for this special gown. The
skins of large fish, generally salmon, are chosen, carefully peeled and the
scales removed. The skins are then hung on a door for one night to dry. Next
comes designing a pattern and the actual dress making. This is done entirely by
hand and takes several months to finish. In earlier times Hezhe women would
begin work on the dress while their daughters were still children. A wedding
gown made of fish skin, however, is a practical garment, being durable and warm
as well as ornamental.

The natural patterns on fish skin give it a special shimmering beauty. But it
is thick and difficult to penetrate with a needle. Making clothes from this
fundamental material is hence a complicated, exacting and awkward process. To
avoid damaging the skin, a length of cut bamboo rather than a knife is used for
skinning. The stitching is done with a fish bone needle and animal tendon
thread. As dozens of fish skins may be needed to make one wedding own, Hezhe
dressmakers must be punctilious about appropriate matches of shape and color.
But the end result and the joyful occasion on which a Hezhe mother's handiwork
is worn, seen and admired compensates for all her labors.


(Source: Xi'an Evening / Translated by womenofchina.cn)