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It's Only a Paper Fan: Christmas Fan Flair


Article # : 10363 

Section : Life
Issue Date : 12 / 1986  1,170 Words
Author : Florence Temko
Florence Temko is an expert craftsman and author of twenty- three how-to books, including Paper Pandas and Jumping Frogs (Origami and Its Uses), published by China Books and Periodicals.

       Fans evoke the vision of elegantly dressed ladies in bygone days hiding their faces seductively. Nowadays fans are more likely to be electrically driven appliances, but the romance of earlier times can be recaptured during the Christmas season by pleating gift warp paper into small and large decorative fans. Placed throughout the home, they create a festive environment with a unique and personal touch.
       
        The earliest fan was probably a leaf waved about by a primitive man to cool himself on a hot day. Experts in the field of decorative arts conjecture that fans were in use in China before recorded history. As the centuries passed, the natural leaf fans developed into elaborate ceremonial objects that were carried at religious and court events. Specific designs indicated aristocratic rank and, in keeping with Chinese customs, decorations were always symbolic.
       
        Inspired by the wings of bats, the Japanese invented the folding fan. The rivet that holds the fan together became emblematic of life's beginning, and the radiating sticks indicate the widening aspects of life's development.
       
        In an unusual contemporary use, Chinese and Korean folk dancers emphasize their graceful motions by swirling handheld fans.
       
        That fans were known in ancient Egypt is demonstrated in tomb pictures where slaves, cooling royalty, and high-ranking courtiers are shown holding large semi-circular fans on poles. Smaller fans, made from reeds and ostrich leaves, were turned into fly whisks to chase away insects.
       
        The word fan actually derives from the Latin word vannus. This was a sturdy leaf employed by the Romans for winnowing grain. Agitating grain caused the light chaff to fly away and the heavy seeds to remain. The word vannus described both the agricultural and the cooling fan.
       
        Portuguese seafarers returning from the Orient brought fans to Europe where they developed into high fashion accessories. France became the ultimate trendsetter, and the fan traveled to the Americas in the company of French gowns and hats.
       
        Fans reflected the general conviction of the times that fine craftsmanship, even in everyday objects, was important. Fan makers lavished elaborate workmanship on their products. Sticks were carved from ivory, mother-of-pearl, tortoise shell, bones, and rare
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