Hoi An Lantern
May 26, 2010 by admin
Filed under Image Gallery, living
While trading with Vietnam during the 16th-17th centuries, many merchants from China and Japan contributed to the distinguished culture of Hoi An commercial harbour.

The lantern is the result of exchanges among Vietnamese, Japanese and Chinese cultures famous for their various and specific identities. Originating from a popular appliance from life, the lantern has been lifted to an art of decoration. It now has a firm position in Hoi An inhabitants’ minds and lives. With skillful hands and bountiful imaginations, the lantern is made for different purposes. It is not only for living, but also an artistic work with pictures on silk. Having lost its initial shape, Hoi An lanterns nowadays can be seen in all different shapes and sizes.

Though made of diversified materials, lanterns with bamboo frames and silk covers are the most typical. You can choose lanterns with wooden frames, sometimes made from very precious wood, and on each side of the lantern is a painting depicting a legend. Once lighted, lanterns will illuminate with marvelous, mysterious and ethereal light as if the past of hundreds of years prior has returned to the present day.

Besides ancient houses of over 100 years old, lanterns are the most special things in Hoi An. Lanterns are seen everywhere in the ancient town, not only in lantern shops. At night, when all shops are closed, lanterns are lighted up. Tourists can see Hoi An people making lanterns on the pavement.


For many years, traditional coloured lanterns have enchanted visitors of Hoi An, particularly foreign visitors. Every year, tens of thousands of Hoi An lanterns are exported or bought by foreign visitors as souvenirs and gifts. As a cultural and tourist product, the lanterns have helped raise the incomes of Hoi An’s residents.


Lanterns are not only a special handicraft item of Hoi An but also a unique characteristic of this ancient town, which can’t be found anywhere else in Vietnam.
Lantern festival in Hoian – 2010
March 20, 2010 by admin
Filed under Hội an value, Image Gallery
The 2nd Hoian Lantern Festival of 2010 will take place from 13 February to 27 February 2010 at Hoai River Square, Hoian ancient town..
The festival will be organised along with the lantern-making competition. The lanterns will be prepared by local enterprises, offices, schools, shops, handicraft worshops, etc. and displayed on Hoai river and at the streets along its two river banks. The record of the biggest lantern will be published.
Hoi An nice shots
March 9, 2010 by admin
Filed under Human, Hội an value, Image Gallery, Old House pics, living
Conveniently located slap-bang in the middle of the country, Hoi An breaks up a journey between the North and South nicely, and as a result, few visitors come to Vietnam without passing through the town. But it is so much more than just a stopover or a tourist trap.
Once an important trading port, but no longer significant by the time of the American War, Hoi An was spared the wartime devastation that so many other towns suffered. As a result its historic buildings have been preserved in a way that is rarely seen elsewhere in Vietnam, and (aside from the trappings of tourism) it really does feel like a place where time has stood still.
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Lanterns in Hoi An Ancient town
November 30, 2009 by admin
Filed under Hội An culture, overview
The tradition to decorate the ancient town in Hoi An with multi-colored lanterns, which started three centuries ago, is still continued today on the fourteenth night of each lunar month in this small town in central Vietnam.
The history of the Hoian lantern
In the past, Vietnamese people often put oil lamps in decorative spherical and hexagonal lantern shades, which were hung in the eaves and both sides of the door in the Chinese style. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, Faifo (the name of Hoi An’s ancient town at that time) was bustling with foreign merchants from the Netherlands, India, and Japan around the clock. Japanese merchants often hung tube and canary-shaped lanterns along the poles in front of their houses, which lit up the whole commercial quarters at night with a glowing, mysterious light. Locals began hanging lanterns out as well, with hopes for bringing good luck and coziness to the town.
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Hoi An Lantern
January 13, 2009 by admin
Filed under Handicraft, Lantern, Shop Hội An Online
Hoian Lantern was made from 100% Jacquard silk fabric stretched over a bamboo frame with a tassel below. These lanterns are inspired by Vietnamese artisans and is meant to bring good fortune. Ships as a narrow tube, then expands like an umbrella in less than a minute. These Vietnamese silk lanterns are handmade using Jacquard silk and brocaded fabric.

+ Color: So much Color (popular: code from 1 to 17 – Image).
+ Quality: From 1 up.
+ Material: Bamboo Frame – Steel wire – Vietnamese Silk.
+ Price: from 1 to 30 USD.
Click here to buy more silk – woods – bamboo Lantern and Lamp
















































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![Hội An at Night [picture collection]](http://www.travel2hoian.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/03/hoian-night-1-120x84.jpg)


