1. Qing Jia's Feet << wikiFeet
Share, rate and discuss pictures of Qing Jia's feet on wikiFeet - the most comprehensive celebrity feet database to ever have existed.
The collaborative celebrity feet website
2. Footbinding | History, Culture & Effects - Britannica
Nov 4, 2024 · Mothers, grandmothers, or older female relatives first bound the girl's feet. The ultimate goal was to make them 3 inches long, the ideal “ ...
Footbinding, cultural practice, existing in China from the 10th century until the establishment of the Peoples Republic of China in 1949, that involved tightly bandaging the feet of women to alter their shape for aesthetic purposes. Footbinding usually began when girls were between 4 and 6 years
3. Unbound: China's last 'lotus feet' – in pictures | Art and design
Missing: Jia Qing's
103 years after foot binding was banned in China, a few women still live with the severe deformity it caused. The photographer Jo Farrell tracked down 50 of them
4. Chinese foot binding - BBC News
Missing: Qing's | Show results with:Qing's
Photographer Jo Farrell's latest project captures some of the last remaining women with bound feet.
5. 'Lotus Feets': the last women in China with bound feet - Fabio Nodari
Missing: Qing's | Show results with:Qing's
Join me on this journey to discover one of ancient China’s most painful traditions, where the last women with bound feet share their incredible stories with me.
6. Foot binding photos of Chinese women to go on show in Hong Kong
Missing: Qing's | Show results with:Qing's
Taken over eight years by photographer Jo Farrell, images of the last surviving Chinese women with bound feet will be exhibited at the Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences
7. The "golden lotuses": bound feet - HKMJ |
The practice of foot binding in Chinese women is a cruel yet mysterious custom that continued for over a thousand years.
Hong Kong Med J 2016 Feb;22(1):90–1 © Hong Kong Academy of Medicine.
8. Jo Farrell's Photos of Chinese Women With Foot Bindings - Business Insider
Missing: Qing's | Show results with:Qing's
Foot binding has long been fading away.
9. The photos of the last surviving Chinese women with bound feet
Missing: Qing's | Show results with:Qing's
We speak to Jo Farrell, the photographer who has taken the horror out of foot binding, aka “lotus feet”, and put tenderness into the story.