A collar strip is a long, narrow piece of white cloth sewn onto the collar of Korean clothing for replacement.
Collar strips are based on the national sentiments of our people who have always preferred brightness and neatness and on the Korean jacket whose edges of collars were adorned with narrow pieces of cloth in the period of the Three Kingdoms. In those days, narrow strips different in color from the grounds of clothing were attached to the collar, cuffs or hems of a Korean jacket. In other words, dark-colored strips were chosen for bright grounds and vice versa.
Adorning their clothes with contrasting colors was a peculiar dressing custom reflecting the requirements of life and aesthetic requirements of our people who tended to dress themselves in neat and beautiful clothes. Collars, cuffs and hems usually get dirty and frayed first. In order to keep them clean and new, our people came up with an idea of sewing strips in contrasting color on those parts. These strips, in combination with ornamental aspects, were gradually made more delicate and elegant by the growing cultural standards, aesthetic sense and requirements of life of people. Consequently, it became a custom to sew white strips around the collars on the basis of the national sentiments of our people who respected brightness, neatness and white. White collar strips guaranteed perfect harmony with the ground colors of Korean jackets, providing a lot more beauty and sophistication.
Thus, collar strips that emphasize the neatness, cleanliness and conspicuousness of jackets became the number one feature of a Korean jacket.
Pak Sin Jong, researcher at the Academy of Social Sciences
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