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Clothing brands of Taiwan (5 P) C. ... Taiwanese businesspeople in fashion (3 P) Pages in category "Taiwanese fashion" The following 5 pages are in this category, out ...
As Taiwan’s art scene matured there began to be a greater specialization in exhibit spaces with dedicated museums for things like photography and ceramics opening. [1] Many contemporary Taiwanese artists grapple with issues of globalization in their work. [11] LGBTQ artists in modern Taiwan enjoy a degree of freedom denied in other Asian ...
Jiufen Old Street is a series of alleyways and a night market in Jiufen, Taiwan. [1] National Geographic has called Old Street "one of the country's most iconic night markets". [ 2 ] Fried fish, noodle soups , peanut ice cream rolls, pork dumplings, sweet potato and taro balls , and Taiwanese sausages are among the many food options available ...
Nymphia Wind performing in 2023 Nymphia Wind in Taiwan Presidential Office in 2024. Since 2018, Nymphia Wind began performing in Taipei. [5] [6] [10] Her first name "Nymphia" comes from the Japanese name of Pokémon character Sylveon, and her last name "Wind" means she likes to be free and invisible, also, "Wind" is a homophone of "craziness" in Mandarin. [7]
In 2010, a large-scale restoration project began. The management committee of the old street was established in 2014. In 2013, a regulation regulating the management of the old streets in New Taipei was enacted, enabling the committee to collect funds to preserve the heritage buildings of the old street. [1]
Vogue Taiwan was established in October 1996 as the 13th international edition of Vogue. It aimed to bring both global fashion trends and local Taiwanese talent into the spotlight. Since its launch, Vogue Taiwan has significantly shaped the Taiwanese fashion industry by featuring homegrown designers, models, and cultural figures.
After the handover of Taiwan from Japan to the Republic of China in 1945, the building became the office of Tainan Salt Works. In 1979, the building was transformed into a museum with the upper floor became the Taiwan Development Wax Museum. It was designated as class 3 historical building. [4]
The street used to be the bustling hub for camphor and tea trades which was built during the Japanese rule of Taiwan.When Daxi town had a boom in trades of those two products, the passage through the street was built as a shortcut for workers to pass through so that they could transport goods without taking a long route to walk.