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  2. Traditional Chinese bookbinding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditional_Chinese...

    Up until the 9th century during the mid-Tang dynasty, most Chinese books were bound scrolls made of materials such as bamboo, wood, silk, or paper. Originally bamboo and wooden tablets were tied together with silk and hemp cords to fold onto each other like an accordion. Silk and paper gradually replaced bamboo and wood.

  3. Prosperous Suzhou - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosperous_Suzhou

    Prosperous Suzhou is a handscroll, a long narrow scroll for displaying a series of scenes. It is twelve meters in length. [2] It is intended to be viewed starting from the right end, by laying it flat on a table and unrolling it. One admires it section for section during the unrolling as if traveling through a landscape, depicting a continuous ...

  4. Bamboo and wooden slips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bamboo_and_wooden_slips

    Bamboo and wooden strips were the standard writing material during the Han dynasty and excavated examples have been found in abundance. [4] Subsequently, the improvements made to paper by Cai Lun during the Han dynasty began to displace bamboo and wooden strips from mainstream uses, and by the 4th century AD bamboo had been largely abandoned as ...

  5. Woodblock printing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodblock_printing

    In modern times, Chinese printing continued the tradition begun in medieval times. Black-and-white woodcuts were generally replaced by colored ones, achieved by printing successive runs with different inks. Between the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th century, three—and five—color prints appeared.

  6. Yinqueshan Han Slips - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yinqueshan_Han_Slips

    The Yinqueshan Han Slips (simplified Chinese: 银雀山汉简; traditional Chinese: 銀雀山漢簡; pinyin: Yínquèshān Hànjiǎn) are ancient Chinese writing tablets from the Western Han dynasty, made of bamboo strips and discovered in 1972. The tablets contain many writings that were not previously known or shed new light on the ancient ...

  7. Handscroll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Handscroll

    The handscroll is a long, narrow, horizontal scroll format in East Asia used for calligraphy or paintings. A handscroll usually measures up to several meters in length and around 25–40 cm in height. [2] Handscrolls are generally viewed starting from the right end. [3] This kind of scroll is intended to be read or viewed flat on a table, in ...