Ming Dynasty Portraits and Paintings showing man and woman wearing <Fujin/幅巾> :
・ <Fujin/幅巾> Wearing Tutorial:
・ Ming Dynasty <Fujin/幅巾> Relics: Unearthed from the tomb of Zhang Mao in the Ming Dynasty (male)
・ Ming Dynasty <Fujin/幅巾> Artifact : Unearthed from the Ming Tomb in Sensenzhuang, Taizhou (male)
[Hanfu · 漢服]China Ming Dynasty Chinese Traditional Clothing Hanfu & Headgear <Fujin/幅巾>
Fujin (Chinese: 幅巾; lit. 'Width of cloth') is a type of guanmao (冠帽), a male traditional headgear generally made from a black fabric in China.
The Fujin is a form of hood made on one width of cloth, from which its Chinese name derived from.It was usually worn with Shenyi (深衣) in the Ming Dynasty.
In China, the Fujin was a popular form of headwear among all the different members of the social strata. It was especially popular amongst the Eastern Han dynasty scholar-bureaucrats.
The fujin also later influenced the development of the futou (襆頭/幞頭).
At the same time, literati women also like to wearing Fujin.