HRMARS - This paper explores the incorporation of Chinese traditional colours into the modern design practice, such as how the traditional colour, which is inherent in the culture, such as vermilion, imperial yellow, jade green and indigo blue are interpreted, used and redefined in the new visual culture. Using the mixed-methods research design, the study collected the qualitative data using semi-structured interviews with 18 experts who included historians, cultural theorists, and professional designers, and the quantitative data collected using a structured survey that was offered to 477 consumers of various demographics. There was the use of purposive, snowball and stratified random sampling to promote both depth and representativeness. The results have shown that traditional Chinese colours have deep kinds of symbolic meaning both to the professional and the general population. Designers stressed on them as tool of cultural distinction and emotionality, especially in branding, fashion and interior design. The consumer survey data showed a great deal of positive correlations with authenticity and aesthetic richness, but a significant generational difference appeared: younger participants were more willing to creative reinterpretation, whereas older generations favored symbolic conservatism. The research states four strategic principles of the practitioners, including historic awareness, contextual adaptation, material and technological integration, and co-creative participation, which can allow designers to maintain cultural authenticity and achieve innovativeness. The results of the findings can be added to the body of research about heritage and design, confirming the idea that traditional Chinese colours can be discussed as living cultural means with the potential to add to the international design practice in the twenty-first century.
Ling et al. (Sun,) studied this question.