Chinese Daily Photos, 2011 to 2019!

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bd popeye

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I felt this article might interest a few of our fine forum members.

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When it comes to surgical procedures to enhance beauty, Chinese women are twice as generous than their global peers, according a report based on a survey by Insight Engineers, a market research consultancy in the United Kingdom.

The survey found that Chinese women spent the equivalent of about 581 yuan ($83.50) per month. That's more than twice the global average of about 254 yuan, and 145 yuan higher than the second group on the list-women from South Korea.

Wang Danru, a plastic surgeon from No 9 People's Hospital affiliated to the medical college at Shanghai Jiao Tong University, said Chinese women are displaying an increasing interest in a range of surgical procedures, mainly to look prettier, rather than fighting aging, which may help explain why the population of plastic surgery patients in the country is much younger than in other places.

The report also said that 74 percent of Chinese respondents associate beauty directly with facial appearance, the highest of all surveyed countries. The biggest concern for Chinese women is flabby skin and crow's feet-the little wrinkles at the corners of the eyes.

The survey interviewed 7,700 "aesthetically aware" women from 16 countries, who were between 18 and 65 years of age.

Aesthetically aware women were defined as those who gave positive answers to at least two of the three questions, including: "It's important for me to look good for my age"; "I care about improving my facial appearance"; and "Spending money on improving my appearance is worthwhile".

Most of the women surveyed in China were from wealthy areas of Beijing, Shanghai or Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong province.

"I would say Chinese patients are the most dramatic," said Woffles Wu, a prominent plastic surgeon in Singapore. His clinic receives 30 to 40 patients from China every month. A few years ago, the number was in single digits, he said.

"Some patients come with no financial limit and just want to achieve the best possible results they can. They are willing to fly back and forth again and again," he said.

Chinese women's fervor for seeking beauty pushed the country's aesthetic medicine market to 400 billion yuan in 2015. It is projected to soar by 20 percent annually, according to the Chinese Association of Plastics and Aesthetics. It is now the third-largest market, after the United States and Brazil.

Research for the report-The Changing Faces of Beauty: A Global Report-was conducted in March by pharmaceutical company Allergan Plc, based in Dublin, Ireland.
 

broadsword

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Gulinazhaer Baihetiyaer, born in Xinjiang and girlfriend of actor Han Zhang

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bd popeye

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Living in the SMOG in China...

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Monday, December 19, 2016
A man cooks in open air as heavy smog blankets Shengfang, in Hebei province, on an extremely polluted day with red alert issued. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

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Monday, December 19, 2016
People make their way through heavy smog on an extremely polluted day with red alert issued, in Shengfang, Hebei province. REUTERS/Damir Sagol

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Sunday, December 18, 2016
People wearing masks stand in smog during a heavily polluted day in Beijing. China Daily/via REUTERS

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Monday, December 19, 2016
People make their way through heavy smog on an extremely polluted day with red alert issued, in Shengfang, Hebei province. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

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Monday, November 14, 2016
People ride during heavy smog in Lianyungang, Jiangsu province. REUTERS/Stringer
 

bd popeye

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SMOG part II

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Monday, December 19, 2016
People ride a bus on an extremely polluted day with red alert issued, in Langfang, Hebei province. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj

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Monday, December 19, 2016
A woman wearing a mask walks along a bridge in smog during a polluted day in Tianjin. REUTERS/Stringer

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Monday, December 19, 2016
Women wearing face masks wait for the bus on an extremely polluted day with red alert issued, in Langfang, Hebei province. REUTERS/Damir Sagol

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Saturday, December 17, 2016
Buildings are seen in heavy smog in Harbin, Heilongjiang province. REUTERS/Stringer
 

vesicles

Colonel
They still use coal rather heater by electricity?

Individual homes use electric heaters. Many homes in northern China actually use hot water/air coil heaters at homes. But the electricity used to heat water and air and used to power home electric heaters got to come from some where. And I believe coal is still used extensively to generate electricity in China.

When I lived I China over 25 years ago, we had hot water coil heater installed at home. Every night, the coil became piping hot, heating up the rooms very well. So hot that we had to open windows to cool down the rooms. Even during day time, the coil was still warm because they can't stop sending hot water down the pipes. If they do, leftover water in the pipes would freeze in the pipes and breaking the pipes. So our houses were always so warm in the winter. Soon after I left China, my buddies told me that they changed the heating system to hot air coils. With only air in the pipes, they would stop sending hot air into pipes during daytime to save energy. Then your house become very cold in daytime. I was happy I didn't have to go through that.

Southern China is not as cold. So southern Chinese houses don't have any installed heating systems. That was intended to save energy. That also means houses in southern China could be as cold as outside, many times close to freezing. So southern Chinese can actually withstand cold better than northern Chinese.

Even when we moved to Texas, we usually keep our house very warm in winter. I used to set my heater to 80 deg F. When I got married, I was shocked when my wife who came from southern China wanted to set the heater to 70 deg F. I simply couldn't stand it when the house was so "cold". My wife told me that their house in China was a lot colder in winter.
 
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