Archive for the 'Chinese Tai Chi' Category
Chinese Tai Chi and Kung Fu: Traditional Chinese silk clothing for Swordsmen
Traditional Chinese silk clothing has a long history, dating back to the 27th century BC.
Once the skill of spinning silk, or sericulture, was discovered, the Chinese made silk exclusively for 3,000 years without divulging the secret of the process and it was a valuable [...]
April 12th, 2008 | Posted in 1st Chinese Kung Fu Fashion Fair, Chinese Kung Fu, Chinese Swordsman, Chinese Tai Chi, Kung Fu Fashion, Traditional Chinese silk clothing, martial artists, tai chi practice, traditional kung fu uniform, traditional taiji silk uniforms | No Comments
Tai Chi Denomination: eight basic movement methods and five forms to Eight Diagrams
This showed that of Tai Chi was based on comparison with the eight basic movement methods and five forms to the Eight Diagrams, Five Xing and its generated number of “Yi with Tai Chi Diagram”.
Except aforesaid analogies on movements & forms and practice [...]
April 4th, 2008 | Posted in Chinese Tai Chi, Tai Chi, Tai Chi Chuan, Tai Chi Denomination, Tai Chi Derivation, Tai Chi Diagrams, Tai Chi Movement methods, Tai Chi movement, Tai Chi practice methods, Tai Ji, Taijiquan | No Comments
Denomination of Tai Chi Was from Comparison on Image and Number of Tai Chi
Viewing records in ancient Tai Chi practicing method and ancient Tai Chi table, denomination of Tai Chi was from comparison on image and number of Tai Chi, then gradually applicated the theory of Tai Chi to interpret the theory of fist moving [...]
March 16th, 2008 | Posted in Chen Style Tai Chi, Chen Tai Chi, Chinese Tai Chi, Tai Chi, Tai Chi Chuan, Tai Ji, Taijiquan | No Comments
Chinese ancient Wushu on the philosophy that One Yin and one Yang forms Dao/Tao
Chinese ancient Wushu has been developing in thousands of years of simple weapon age on the basis of the philosophy of “One Yin and one Yang forms Dao”. In the middle age of Ming dynasty, the ancient Wushu reached its peak, yet [...]
March 16th, 2008 | Posted in Ancient Chinese Kung Fu, Ancient Chinese Kungfu, Ancient Chinese Wushu, Chinese Kung Fu, Chinese Tai Chi, Chinese Wushu, Chinese ancient Wushu, Tai Chi, Tai Ji, Wushu practioners, Yin and Yang | 1 Comment
Yin and Yang dialectical principles in Tai Chi Diagrams for Tai Chi Devevelopment
The appearance of these Tai Chi Diagrams made the meaning of Tai Chi more intuitive and visualized.
With development of the ancients’ research on the theory and phase of Tai Chi, the had gradually been taken as the basic rules for understanding and solving [...]
March 16th, 2008 | Posted in Chinese Kung Fu, Chinese Tai Chi, Chinese Wushu, Tai Chi Chuan, Tai Chi Diagrams, Tai Chi learning, Taiji, Taijiquan, Yin and Yang | No Comments