999精品在线视频,手机成人午夜在线视频,久久不卡国产精品无码,中日无码在线观看,成人av手机在线观看,日韩精品亚洲一区中文字幕,亚洲av无码人妻,四虎国产在线观看 ?

A New Soul for Old Shoes

2017-04-29 00:00:00byZhangJinwen
China Pictorial 2017年11期

Like so many other time-honored brands, Neiliansheng is legendary. From the late Qing Dynasty(1644-1911) to present, the shoemaker has endured 164 years of wind and rain, evolving from custom-made court boots to fashionable modern footwear, composing a brilliant page in Chinese business history.

Pioneer in High-end Customization

The birth of Neiliansheng can be traced back to 1853, the third year of Emperor Xianfeng’s reign during the Qing Dynasty. The company was founded by Zhao Ting, a native of Wuqing County, Tianjin. Plagued by poor living conditions, his parents sent him to learn shoemaking in a shop at Dongsi in Beijing when he was only 12 years old.

The talented and studious child quickly picked up the craft. Following his mentor, he also paid attention to how they maintained relationships with old customers. Due to appreciation for his craftsmanship and business sensibilities, a military general proposed jointly opening a shoe shop with him. Neiliansheng was only founded in Beijing’s Dongjiaominxiang thanks to financial aid from the general.

The Dongjiaominxiang district where Neiliansheng was founded was not yet an embassy community in 1853, but a busy business zone with a myriad of government offices. As a talented businessman, Zhao chose the advantageous location with an eye on high-end customers who could afford to use sedan chairs. An investigation revealed that government officials were not happy with shoemakers for the royal court at the time, so he started by making court boots.

The brand name itself, “Neiliansheng,”won favor in the first place. In Chinese,“nei” means the interior royal court; and“liansheng” means “consistent luck in getting promotions as an official.” Not much more branding was necessary. For a long time, not only government heavyweights from both civil and military realms wore the boots made by Neiliansheng, but the last emperor of the Qing Dynasty wore them the day he took the throne.

Zhao was responsible for creating the oldest extant list of VIP customers in Chinese business history. To provide optimal service, Zhao recorded every detail about his royal and aristocratic clients: size, style, origin, address, and even hobbies, calling such data Shoe-related Info. All a customer had to do was send a messenger to the shop, and shoes would be delivered to the buyer’s doorstep. Such a practice paved the road for high-end customized service in today’s China.

Thorough Craftsmanship

The Revolution of 1911 ended the millennia-old feudal autocracy in China, dealing a near-fatal blow to Neiliansheng’s business due to a sudden lack of customers. In dire need of drastic diversification, it launched a landmark product—handmade cloth shoes, which have remained its signature footwear since the Republic of China period (1912-1949).

Literally meaning “thousand-layered sole,” the craftsmanship of the shoes was included in the second group of China’s national intangible cultural heritage in 2009. The technique has been passed down through apprenticeships and oral teaching. Usually, it takes more than three years to make an apprentice a qualified shoemaker. The whole production process involves over 90 steps and more than 30 tools.

Of all the steps, making the soles is the most cumbersome. “It’s a lot of work,”admits He Kaiying, a state-level representative inheritor of the intangible cultural heritage in the company. “Eighty-one neat and orderly stitches are made both vertically and horizontally, crisscrossing an area as big as a match box. An ordinary pair of shoes usually takes 2,100 stitches and complicated designs take twice as many.”It usually takes several hours to finish the soles of one pair.

As an inheritor of the craft, responsibility weighs heavily on He Kaiying. “We must never lose cultural heritage while it remains in our hands,” he insists.

Inheritance vs. Innovation

In the 1980s, the implementation of reform and opening-up policies invigorated China economically, igniting a new challenge for Neiliansheng. Handmade cloth shoes had been gradually marginalized into a niche product or even “arts and crafts” due to competition from mainstream products such as leather shoes and sneakers.

To catch up with the market economy, Neiliansheng attempted production of sports and leather shoes, which proved non-competitive in terms of product features and production efficiency. After more than 10 years of hiking a bumpy road and market downturn, in early 2000, Neiliansheng underwent system reform as a stateowned enterprise, ultimately realigning its operational orientation—to a return to its signature handmade cloth shoes.

“We still target the high-end market, with focus on civil servants, scholars, and entertainers,” illustrates Cheng Xu, deputy general manager of the company. “We must best our competitors with top-of-theline craftsmanship as our efficiency cannot rival that of mechanical production.”

After many years of work, another major breakthrough was made in online marketing. After an extensive investigation, Neiliansheng launched a website for online shopping in 2010. “Now our annual online sales exceed a million yuan,” grins Cheng. “And it costs only 10,000 to 20,000 yuan for website maintenance.”

At the beginning of 2011, Neiliansheng opened its flagship online stores at Tmall and JD.com, China’s two leading e-commerce platforms.

In 2013, in commemoration of the 160th anniversary of the brand, Neiliansheng organized a release show at Prince Gong’s Mansion in Beijing, debuting nearly 100 latest arrivals, a visual feast integrating traditional crafts and modern fashion against the backdrop of solemn architecture featuring Chinese characteristics.

Since then, the company has launched themed campaigns for holidays and major buying periods including the Alibaba New Year Shopping Festival and celebrations for the opening of Shanghai Disneyland on May 20, 2016.

But Cheng Xu is most excited these days by the company’s “Big Fish Begonia” series. “The animated film of the same name premiered in July 2016, at which time we joined hands with relevant companies for a licensing deal and released a limited-edition cloth shoes series at Tmall. We amassed 400,000 yuan of preorders, topping the film’s merchandising. But its numbers were later surpassed because manual production capacity was limited, and we couldn’t fill more orders. Neiliansheng made remarkable achievements in product innovation, but it is another story for us to finalize a plan to feed customer demand by sewing stitch after stitch,” Cheng admits.

主站蜘蛛池模板: 国产新AV天堂| 国产成人精品男人的天堂下载| 香蕉eeww99国产精选播放| h网址在线观看| 精品1区2区3区| 日本免费高清一区| 欧美激情第一欧美在线| 免费观看无遮挡www的小视频| 亚洲国产亚综合在线区| 日韩乱码免费一区二区三区| 国产99视频在线| 手机成人午夜在线视频| 国产精品久久久久久久久久98| 久久久久国产一级毛片高清板| 99久久精品免费观看国产| 久久国产精品影院| 久久一级电影| 国产男女免费完整版视频| 色综合久久无码网| 伊人精品视频免费在线| 久热99这里只有精品视频6| 欧美成人午夜在线全部免费| 91欧美在线| 国产成人高精品免费视频| 亚洲swag精品自拍一区| 国产在线视频导航| 乱系列中文字幕在线视频| 69免费在线视频| 欧美亚洲国产一区| 亚洲欧美一级一级a| 日本人妻丰满熟妇区| 欧美激情伊人| 国产成人综合久久精品下载| 国产不卡一级毛片视频| 亚洲不卡网| 日本国产精品| 亚洲人成网站色7777| 91精品伊人久久大香线蕉| 91精品国产91久久久久久三级| 日韩精品欧美国产在线| 97久久免费视频| 日韩欧美色综合| 四虎永久在线视频| 免费观看男人免费桶女人视频| 日本爱爱精品一区二区| 最近最新中文字幕免费的一页| 亚洲欧洲日韩综合| 蜜臀AV在线播放| 亚洲欧洲美色一区二区三区| 一本久道久久综合多人| 福利片91| 日韩天堂视频| 日韩福利在线观看| 亚洲VA中文字幕| 自拍偷拍一区| 精品视频一区二区观看| 特级精品毛片免费观看| 国产麻豆另类AV| 国产欧美日韩va| 亚洲va视频| 国产乱人免费视频| 99热这里只有免费国产精品| 97青草最新免费精品视频| 国产性精品| 国产SUV精品一区二区6| 国产精品尤物在线| 国产亚洲高清在线精品99| 欧美精品H在线播放| 麻豆国产精品| 色综合久久综合网| 亚洲人成影院在线观看| 国产91成人| 蜜桃视频一区二区| 国产呦精品一区二区三区网站| 久久99国产精品成人欧美| 欧美一级黄色影院| 99人妻碰碰碰久久久久禁片| 992Tv视频国产精品| 欧美性精品| 亚洲三级a| 欧美一级一级做性视频| 香蕉久久永久视频|