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"My life has been about finding a balance between the fashion world and my communist family," said Wan Baobao, a jewelry designer whose father Wan Jifei is a government minister. Her grandfather, Wan Li, is a former chairman of the National アルバイトPeople's Congress Standing Committee and former vice premier of the State Council.
Wan refers to herself as a communist girl living in a capitalist world, who splits her time between Beijing and Hong Kong shopping for luxury goods and partying at private clubs.
In 2007, Wan launched her own jewelry brand, settling her Beijing office in a typical hutong courtyard north of the Forbidden City.
Wan may not use traditional forms of advertising for her products, which range in price from 5,000 yuan to hundreds of thousands, but she never missesハウスクリーニング an opportunity to display them. Just last Saturday she appeared at an event as her own model, sporting a 200,000-yuan necklace.
With no company nameplate on the door, her antique style office resembles Wan's childhood home in Zhongnanhai, an area in central Beijing adjacent株 to the Forbidden City which serves as the central headquarters for the Communist Party of China and the State Council.
According to Wan, her privileged and over-protective upbringing had made her afraid of the outside world as a child. "I felt inferior instead of superior," she says.
Growing up, Wan spent most of her time with soldiers from the People's Liberation Army and other staff members. She admired債務整理 the kids playing outside those confines, however, where she "longed desperately to play with them every day."
The year 1990 was a turning point for Wan, when she was suddenly sent to America to study at the age of nine. "It was like a genetic mutation. Everything changed after that."
Wan recalls that she was often teased and bullied at that time, but gradually became more strong-minded and rebellious. |
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