The styles of Han costumes in different dynasties are introduced as follows:
Han Dynasty: Han Dynasty costumes were mainly "straight and curved". Women's dresses are mainly dark-colored and have multiple layers of winding trains. The skirts have many layers of winding skirts and the hems are enlarged. The clothes have the following shapes: crossed collar, right gusset, and wild sleeves. The sleeves and hem have large wide edges.
Wei, Jin, Southern and Northern Dynasties: The clothes in the Wei and Jin Dynasties were mostly crossed collars, wide sleeves, and large cuffs. Wearing a jacket and skirt on the upper body, and a pleated skirt on the lower body. The skirt is long and touches the floor, and it is frugal at the top and rich at the bottom. The main styles include Jin jacket and miscellaneous jacket.
Sui and Tang Dynasties: Most women in the Sui Dynasty wore undershirts, shirts, coats, and skirts. The characteristic of the Tang Dynasty was the unification of skirts, shirts, and skirts. Women mostly wear skirts on their chests, and the collars of their clothes are also diverse, including round collars, square collars, slant collars, etc. The main styles of Hanfu include: men's round-neck robes and blouses, women's chest-high skirts, flat collars, medium-color groups and broken skirts.
Song Dynasty: The Song Dynasty was more literary, so women could not dress as openly as in the Tang Dynasty. So the wide-sleeved shirt was changed to a narrow-sleeved jacket. In the Song Dynasty, there were many double-breasted garments. The open lapels were often tied with ropes, and the wrapped clothes could be seen from between the double-breasted garments. The length of the garment is above the knee and in line with the skirt. Its shapes include: men's Taoist robes, dark clothes, half-breasted and half-arms, and straight skirts; women's Song Mo, Guzi, Song trousers, and half-arms.
Ming Dynasty: In the Ming Dynasty, buttons replaced the tethers, and their buckles were mother-and-son buttons. Clothes mainly feature vertical lapels, slant lapels, stand collars, and round collars. The underwear has a small round collar on the main waist and buttons on the neck. The body of the clothes is longer, with cloud shoulders and bijia (a large vest, and a man's robe with a hood outside). The skirt combines the characteristics of the Mongolian people in the Yuan Dynasty to form a "horse-faced skirt" with an inverted trapezoid shape like a horse's face on the front and back.
Men have cross-collar gowns and linings, while women have a variety of styles: stand-up collars, slanted lapels and vertical lapels, long or short coats, shirts, gauze, cloaks, shawls, horse-faced skirts, and clouds. Shoulder, Bi Jia.