Summer Hanfu and Winter Hanfu Fabric Guide
Season changes how hanfu feels. Summer hanfu should breathe, move, and dry safely. Winter hanfu needs structure, warmth, and enough room for layers. The same silhouette can behave very differently depending on fabric.
Summer hanfu
Look for lighter silk, gauze, ramie, linen, and simpler layers.
Winter hanfu
Winter hanfu can use brocade, jacquard, lined jackets, capes, and heavier skirts. Check shoulder width, sleeve movement, and ease for inner layers.
Inside YUUNI’s S/S 2026 Collection: From Suzhou Craft to Modern Wardrobe
YUUNI’s S/S 2026 collection begins with a simple question: how can traditional textile memory become part of a modern wardrobe without losing its atmosphere? The answer is not to copy the past exactly, but to preserve its sense of rhythm, proportion, and material presence.
Suzhou as a texture
Suzhou carries a long association with silk, gardens, water, and refined craft. For this collection, that reference appears through controlled sheen, layered surfaces, quiet florals, and garments that reveal detail slowly.
Tradition entering daily life
The collection is built around movement: skirts that can be styled with modern tops, layers that can travel, and pieces that feel special without becoming untouchable.
How to Care for Silk, Brocade, and Embroidered Hanfu
Hanfu care depends on fabric, construction, and decoration. Silk, brocade, jacquard, and embroidery each react differently to water, heat, friction, and storage pressure.
Washing
For delicate pieces, dry cleaning or careful hand washing is usually safer than machine washing. Use cool water and mild detergent when hand washing is allowed.
Storage
Store clean and fully dry. Fold along existing construction lines when possible, and avoid crushing pleats for long periods.