Zhao Wei International Net Family

Colorful Zhao Wei, Graceful Posture

七彩赵薇万种风情
Author: WoWo (China)
6/8/2001
Reposted from The Moon's Sky

RED
As for red, except brides, few people can show its real character. The color is so splendid and passionate that only lucid and noble faces with imminent beauty can "deter". Among the female entertainers, only Zhao Wei and Kelly Chan are matched with this colour. The beauty of Zhao Wei in 'Princess Huanzhu' was fluid and innocent. Between the bright red of Princess's dress and her naughty expressions of eyes was a luminous contrast. In XiaXin advertisements, her dark brown hair and witty iris made her as shining as flames. And she was so cute in the postural photos when she wore those simple red T-shirt and blue jeans. As lovely as a blooming red rose. When it came to 'Love & Rain', the bright red dress of a singer made her look like a full-blown rose at night, fragrant and seductive.
> Zhao Wei in Red, incomparably bright.
WHITE
Early Zhao Wei left us quite a few white images, almost all of which were student-like appearance without makeup, simple and attractive. Well shot, mild and charming, her promotion photos for Red Earth gave people a fresh feeling. In white, Zhao Wei's lotus-pure appearance was breathtaking. And the white color in magazine Marie Claire [1] decorated her skin seductively, stereoscopically, and added cool sexiness and clarity to her.
> Zhao Wei in White, purely clean.

GREEN
Zhao Wei seems to rarely wear green. I only saw her in green on two magazine covers in Mainland. One was shot recently, with blue-greenish T-shirt, dancing hair, which made the picture pleasing. Another was shot earlier, with green wool hat of horn-style, cream-colored strips in green background, seven-tenth-sleeve jacket, and pure green long skirt. Zhao Wei sat there holding her jaws, her face enchanting. Green dedicated her waterish skin, waterish eyes, and made her like a spring angle fallen on earth. She could melt all ice.
> Zhao Wei in Green, charmingly vernal.
BLUE
Zhao Wei fits blue. I remember that the peacock blue Princess [2] suit appropriately manifested her girlish loveliness, and the nobility of a princess, whereas the light blue suits with slightly pink looked young and fresh. In 'Old House Joy' [3], wearing a light blue T-shirt with jeans pants of the same color, she was enviably young. The best was the lake blue T-shirt that she wore in some activity recently. She was pure with a gleam of sexiness, more beautiful than the flower she held. Lately in 'Love & Rain', all her light blue costumes were delicate. She has several photos in them with Leo Ku under the tree on the bank were picturesque and poetic, so mildly worm.
> Zhao Wei in Blue, beautifully watery.

ORANGE
The first I saw Zhao Wei wore orange was when she went to Hong Kong. Her orange long-sleeved polo shirt and white long skirt made her warm and beautiful, with frank and happy smiles that never changed. In another photo, with two slender plaits, she had two flower-like dimples. And her orange flossy jacket added some lucidity to her.
> Zhao Wei in Orange, sunny beauty.

PINK
Zhao Wei was so "sweet" in pink. I recalled that on some magazine cover, she held her jaws in a cloud of pink wools, purely and indeed attractively. And another style of pint T-shirt makes her tender and mild, kind and friendly.
> Zhao Wei in Pink, transparently sweet

BLACK
Recently Zhao Wei wore black frequently, in the album release conference, movie ShaoLin Soccer's premiere, 'Music Ceremony' award show... Those black suits made her look noble and mature. I also remembered one of her earlier photos, in which she so shapely wore a black sleeveless turtleneck vest. She sexily and mildly leaned on an old wall, appearing a little myth.
> Zhao Wei in Black, gracefully noble.

COLORFUL
Zhao Wei's beauty is bright, so bright color is appealingly beautiful for her. For example, the Princess suits, and the light blue and pink folk costume, were some country colors, but she wore them without commonplace. She is versatile.
> Colorful Zhao Wei, Graceful Posture

 

Translator's notes.
[1]: July 2001 issue.
[2]: The Chinese for princess in the Qing Dynasty.
[3]: Pronounced as Lao Fang You Xi/Biao Mei Ji Xiang in Chinese.

Translated by Paul (China)
Edited by Alice (Hong Kong)

( categories: Mainland China )