The Color RED in Chinese New Year

The color red is associated with fire—one of the five elements (metal, fire, water, wood and air). It is an auspicious color representing vitality, celebration, joy, luck, prosperity, and fertility. Who wouldn’t want their new year to start with such a positive and powerful color?

So, of course, it is the color most associated with celebrations, all celebrations. Its emphasis on prosperity includes fertility. Traditional Chinese weddings are fill with red—the bridge’s dress as well as the decorations.

Nevertheless, you do not want to write a congratulatory note using red ink for the couple’s names. Because, while red is a buoyant color, full of luck and prosperity for the future, it is not used to write people’s names. That’s considered rude and bad luck. There seems to be various possible reasons for this. There is the belief that the King of Hades had a book with everyone’s name in it—living and dead. And, he used red to mark through the names of people who were going to die. On earth, during the Imperial Period, convicted criminals who were to be executed also had their names highlighted in red. Plus, names on tombstones and ancestor tablets could be written in red. All of this association of red with dying made using red for names unlucky and inauspicious.

Except for being careful for using red with names, red is a wonderful, favorable, and auspicious color.  So, enjoy decorating with red and giving out red envelopes (with money inside for the recipient as a gift) this New Year holiday!

*photos from depositphotos.com

For an historical Chinese adventure/mystery read The Mei-hua Trilogy by P.A. De Voe

What is Chinese New Year?

Chinese New Year is a special festivity based on the lunar calendar not the solar calendar. It’s celebrated on the first moon of the lunisolar calendar and marks the beginning of spring. Therefore, Chinese New Year is sometimes also called the Lunar New Year or the Spring Festival.

Although here in the US, we typicaly call it Chinese New Year, there are other Asian countries that celebrate this time of the year. Taiwan, South Korea, Vietnam, Singapore, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Indonesia do, too. And, of course, it is a time of festivities across the globe—due to the widely spread Asian diaspora. While western nations celebrate the beginning of the solar New Year for one day, the lunar New Year is celebrated over the course of several days in Asia.

Typically, the Lunar New Year begins with the Spring Festival on the first new moon of the lunar calendar and goes through the Lantern Festival on the next full moon of the lunar month.  That means this year, 2024, people begin their festivities on February 10th and enjoy a holiday period through February 24th. This two-week period is especially important for family and friends to be together; people travel great distances to be home with their family and share in the New Year’s festivities.  

photo from Depositphotos