• Title/Summary/Keyword: Goegye

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The Adaptation and Transformation of the Royal Style "Keunmeori", Grand Headdress in Modern Civil Wedding -Focusing on Goegye- (근대 민간 혼례 큰머리 양식의 궁중 양식 수용과 변용 -괴계를 중심으로-)

  • Sunhee Oh
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Clothing and Textiles
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    • v.48 no.2
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    • pp.382-396
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    • 2024
  • "Keunmeori", the grand headdress with various decorations attached to thickly braided and raised hair has been used as a bride's formal attire since the Joseon Dynasty, and in the modern period, new styles known as goegye and hyuche appeared as formal attire for civil weddings. Goegye was formed from a round wooden pillar wrapped with hair and decorated richly with ornaments; getting married with goegye meant that the wife was officially married. Hyuche was made by braiding the hair into two long plaits and decorating it with colorful fluttering hairpins and gold leaf hair ribbons. Hyuche was originally formal attire for a princess at her wedding, and it is thought to have been less frequently used in the private sector due to its higher cost than goegye. The style of goegye appears to have been influenced by the susik, the highest formal attire for a queen, and in particular, the decorations on the circular top part of the susik were presumed to have been similarly reproduced in folk weddings. Goegye changed in various aspects according to the social environment and atmosphere of the times, and was also used as formal attire for a prince's wife.