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Museum Quality Antique Chinese Coir Raincoat, Qing Dynasty 45(w)x43(h)"

$ 633.6

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Original/Reproduction: Antique Original
  • Condition: This is such a beautiful piece... and a "show stopper" piece to add to your collection. This item was purchased at an estate sale many years ago.Please view ALL photos for the condition of this item, and below you will find more info on this item.
  • Color: Brown
  • Age: Pre-1800
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
  • Primary Material: Straw
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Region of Origin: China
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
  • Framed: Vintage

    Description

    If you have any questions please feel free to send me an email and I will be happy to help. Your item(s) will be safely packaged and handled with care and will be shipped via USPS or UPS only. For health and safety concerns I will only handle items through Ebay, there is no local pickup or drop offs. I am great with responding to my emails so please no personal calls or texts. If payment is not received within 48 hours your item will no longer be available for purchase and will be relisted.
    thanks!
    Below
    is some information I found on the history of this Chines Ancent Raincoat from CITS.net...
    Chinese raincoats have gone through several changes. The earliest forms of Chinese raincoats were made of straw with the name of "straw rain capes" or "coir rain capes". Originally, rain capes were made of Chinese silvergrass. Along with the progress of times, a couple of materials were found suitable for making rain capes. But straw rain capes were still used, especially among farmers and fishermen. These straw rain capes were described in lots of poems and articles in various dynasties. In the Tang and Song dynasties, sedge was the main material for making rain capes. It was chosen for its smooth surface and hollow structure, which makes it hard for water to permeate.
    With the time went by, there developed a more advanced raincoat with the name of "oil coat", which was made of fabrics like ordinary silk or thin, tough silk treated with oil. The oil used at that time was called "yellow oil", which was today's tung oil. Apart from raincoats made of sedge and oiled silk, there were raincoats made of burlap, coir hair and other materials.
    After the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644), raincoats were more and more elaborately made, with a lot of materials to choose from. There was a kind of raincoat used by men and women from wealthy families called “jade needle cape”, which was woven with a kind of high-class jade-like grass that is soft and waterproof. It was the raincoat worn by Jia Baoyu, a young aristocrat in the classical novel A Dream of Red Mansions.
    There was another type of raincoat in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1912). The raincoat was named "pipal raincoat", because it was woven with pipal tree leaves. It was the kind of raincoat worn by the Qing-Dynasty emperors and officials. There were stringent rules on the use of the raincoat, with yellow ones for the exclusive use of the emperor, red ones for princes and the highest court officials, and cyan ones for the second-ranking officials. The raincoat consisted of an upper part and a lower one, with the upper being a "rain jacket" and the lower a "straw apron". Felt was the material for the raincoat for winter use; as for spring and autumn, sateen, camlet and oil silk were chosen.