About Us

Welcome to Cheers2Home, where traditional heritage inspires us to bring unique and creative products to people around the world.

Join us on a journey of cultural inspiration as we offer a diverse range of handcrafted treasures, each reflecting the rich tapestry of our heritage and creativity.

Ceramic

Shiwan ware has been the shining star in Chinese folk ceramic artas early as the Tang and Song Dynasties (618-906AD), and flourished in the Ming and Qing dynasties. Shiwan craftsmen are well-known for their glazing techniques and unique forms, (all hand-formed), and involves numerous family members within a village.

The ware – developed in the region during the 16th century, when skilled Ming dynasty craftsmen from central China brought their expertise to Shiwan, weaving it with local artisan culture – came to be recognised as its own style, fashioned in heavily glazed colours and initially designed mainly for practical purposes.

The mass emigration – known as Chinese diaspora – of the 19th century saw a number of Guangdong people leave the country, spreading Shiwan ware outside of China to Japan and East Asia. But the style remained a mainstay of Chinese ceramics design, its vivid hues of reds, whites, and blues an unmistakable sign of its region of provenance.

Cantonese Embroidery

Cantonese embroidery is highly regarded for its full composition, vivid images, bright colors, multiple embroidery techniques, smoothness, and evenness. This style usually use nature or auspicious symbols as the subject matters. Located in a subtropical region with plenty of sunshine and rainfall, Cantonese and Teochew have had access to a diverse set of flora and fauna, resulting nature being an important source of inspiration for Yue embroidery's aesthetics. Yue embroidery can be further divided into four styles: woolen needlepoint tapestry, bead embroidery, machine embroidery and "Ding Gum Sau" (the use of silver and gold threads). Yue embroidery can be founded on various objects: hanging screen, clothes, shoes, etc.

Dancing Lion

As one of the important origins of Lingnan culture, Foshan has many cultural symbols. The intangible cultural heritages in Foshan like the famous Cantonese opera, paper cutting, wood engraving pictures, Canton embroidery still shine brightly with the preservation of generations of inheritors after so many years.

Lion Dance is divided into North and South lion. South Lion prevails in the south, also known as Dancing Lion, among which Guangdong Lion is the most representative. Lion Dance lies in Guangdong, which originated from Foshan. Foshan is recognized as the birthplace of lion dance and the first "Chinese Sports City of Lion Dance and Dragon Boat." Once Upon a Time - in Xiqiao Mountain, Foshan appeared Huang Feihong, a celebrity in the history of lion dance. Southern Lion art advocated by Huang Feihong shows integrity of Chinese Nation and reflects an ethnic pride of development, solidarity and fearlessness.