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2011-09-12 00:00:00.0

China's high-heeled stampede into the world of luxury fashion owes its roots to a rich history of salient tastemakers, who championed new individual style over classic utilitarian uniformity. Find out who led the sartorial charge into the intriguing, ever-evolving world of "China Style"…

Empress Dowager
Empress Dowager
China's last, most notorious empress, Cixi of the Qing dynasty, lived an imperial life mostly cloaked in mystery — but her fashion frolickings were well known. From her famed long, golden fingernail protectors to her embroidered, imperial yellow robes, Cixi actually favoured a more informal dress, such as the changyi, a loose-fitted gown, that was popular during her reign.
PHOTO: Universal Images Group/Getty Images
Suzie Wong
Suzie Wong
The fashionable, tight-fitted, bosom-hugging cheongsam or qipao dress of early Republican China — and specifically, of early-1920s Shanghai — pinned its mark worldwide with actress Nancy Kwan's role in Richard Quine's film, "The World of Suzie Wong". The cheongsam's popularisation, with its high collar that flattered a woman's slender neck, rose in tandem with short hair styles.
PHOTO: Keystone/Getty Images
Madame Chiang
Madame Chiang
Soong Meiling, wife of Chiang Kai-Shek, was a woman of eloquence and diplomacy — and timeless fashion style. It was reported in 1928 that Madame Chiang made sun umbrellas a fashion essential, having carried one wherever she went, irrespective of the time.
PHOTO: Bachrach/Getty Images
Tsai Chin
Tsai Chin
The sultry, Tianjin-born pin-up became internationally renowned for her roles in both Western and Eastern films, including her cameo in the fashion cult-classic, Michelangelo Antonioni's "Blow-up", as well as as James Bond's conspicuous Chinese lover in "You Only Live Twice". Tsai Chin is pictured here in a 1961 portrait.
PHOTO: Michael Ward/Hulton Archive
Maggie Cheung
Maggie Cheung
"In the Mood for Love", Wong Kar-Wai's 2000 art-house classic starring Maggie Cheung and Tony Leung, brought a modern-day revival of the cheongsam, thanks to artistic director William Cheung Suk-Ping. In 2010, an "In the Mood for Love"-inspired capsule collection was created by Rodarte's Mulleavy sisters in an effort to raise money for UNICEF.
PHOTO: Getty Images
Fan BingBing
Fan Bingbing
Chinese actress and budding fashion icon Fan Bing Bing marked her place in paparazzi history when she gracefully sauntered down a red carpet at the 64th Cannes Film Festival this year in a crane-embroidered silk red gown. Created by Chinese designer Bo Kewen, Fan's support of Mainland designers has propelled the Chinese fashion movement onto a global stage.
PHOTO: Ian Gavan/Getty Images

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