Category: Chinese Character & Japanese Kanji Calligraphy Wall Scrolls

Double Happiness
Wedding Guestbook Wall Scroll (extra-long version)

Double Happiness - Wedding Guestbook Wall Scroll (extra-long version)
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156cm
61½"
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arrow 49.9cm
19½"
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Typical Gallery Price: $100.00

Your Price: $42.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £27.84British Pounds
Euro €33.41Euro
Canadian $45.31Canadian Dollars
Australian $47.09Australian Dollars

SOLD

Similar artwork may be available, please post your request on our forum if interested



Approximate Measurements

Painting: 31.6cm x 99.6cm  ≈  12½" x 39¼"

Silk Scroll: 40.9cm x 156cm  ≈  16" x 61½"

Width at Wooden Knobs: 49.9cm  ≈  19½"

Information about caring for your new Wall Scroll

Note: It's hard to see in the picture, but this was built with ivory-colored silk brocade (not pure white).

Double Happiness Wedding Guest book Wall Scroll

Several people have spontaneously asked for this over the years, so we thought it was time to add it as a regular item.

The symbol at the top is of course, "double happiness", the symbol of a happy wedding and marriage in Chinese culture.

In this case, it is written a the top of the artwork panel. A vast amount of space is left below the character so that guests can both sign their names and give good wishes. At the end of the wedding, it will look like a page from your high school yearbook. But this is something that you can hang and display on your wall for a while. When you feel the time is right, you can roll it up, and put it in your memory box. This is a great and unique keepsake.

Instructions for use: I suggest you lay the scroll out flat on a table (preferably a glass table, or a table that is very flat, as to allow for smooth writing). Thin felt tip pens may work better, as aggressive use of a ballpoint pen could cause a small tear.

I've heard feedback from one customer who hung two of these on glass doors at the church (not doors that were being used for coming and going). She used a suction cup with hook to hang them, and said it worked out well. I still think laying it flat on a table is a more controlled method (you wouldn't want your guest book to come flying off a door).

If you would like us to make you a custom guest book wall scroll (or two), just post your request on our forum, and we'll be happy to comply. We have several colors of silk and papers that can be used in constructing such a scroll, though red paper is almost mandatory, as a good luck color, for Chinese-themed weddings.


This piece is painted with special Chinese ink on xuan paper (rice paper) mounted to a traditional silk scroll.

Chinese Calligraphy is only practiced by those with a keen and agile hand. It is an art that dates back thousands of years, and great artists, writers, and poets are often admired for their calligraphy ability and style.

The artist's name is "Li Dan Qing" who is from Beijing, China. He is an older man with good calligraphy skills.

To create this art, Li Dan Qing used special Chinese ink on thick rice paper. Then I took it to the best painting mounters in Beijing to mount the painting on a silk scroll.

This hanging scroll is really nice since it doesn't require framing. Just hang it on your wall as Chinese people have done for centuries.



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Typical Gallery Price: $100.00

Your Price: $42.88U.S. Dollars

GBP £27.84British Pounds
Euro €33.41Euro
Canadian $45.31Canadian Dollars
Australian $47.09Australian Dollars

SOLD

Similar artwork may be available, please post your request on our forum if interested



All orders billed in U.S. Dollars.
Other currencies shown for reference at approximate exchange rates.


Item Location: USA
details


Gary's random little things about China:

Where's my fortune cookie?

So after traveling to China, you have just finished your first meal in a real Chinese restaurant.
But the bill comes, and the waiter forgot to bring everyone their fortune cookies!
Well, actually not...
You see, fortune cookies did not come from China (at least not directly).
One legend has it in the late 1800s or early 1900s, a Chinese man running a noodle making shop in San Francisco accidentally mixed a bunch of sugar in his dough, and didn't want to waste it. So he made cookies and stuck papers with people's fortunes on them as a novelty.
In the end, it's really the Chinese visitors to America that are confused when the waiter brings them a blob of sugary noodle dough with a piece of paper stuck in it.

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