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Happy New Year! China Carbon Network wishes you all a joyous Spring Festival and prosperity in the Year of the Dragon!

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2025/11/17

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Happy New Year! China Carbon Network wishes you all a joyous Spring Festival and prosperity in the Year of the Dragon!


The Spring Festival, also known as the Lunar New Year, marks the beginning of the lunar calendar year and is traditionally regarded as the most important festival of the year. It is commonly referred to as "New Spring," "New Year," "New Age," "Year's First Day," "Year's Blessings," or simply "Grand Year." The Spring Festival has a long history, evolving from ancient rituals held at the start of the year to pray for a bountiful harvest.

During the Spring Festival, various celebrations marking the arrival of the New Year are held across the country, each brimming with distinctive regional characteristics and radiating a lively, joyous atmosphere. These activities primarily focus on bidding farewell to the old and welcoming the new, warding off evil spirits and averting disasters, honoring gods and ancestors, and praying for blessings and a prosperous year ahead. With their diverse and colorful forms, these events encapsulate the essence of traditional Chinese culture.

Paste Spring Festival couplets
Hang up Spring Festival couplets and celebrate the New Year! During the Spring Festival, every household puts up bright red couplets—also known as "Spring Couplets," "Door Couplets," or "Door Pairs"—on their doors.
Cut paper-cuts
With skillful hands, craft exquisite paper-cuttings to welcome good fortune home! Paper-cutting is a time-honored and widely practiced folk art in China, embodying the charm of Chinese national culture.
Eat dumplings
Dumplings, known as “jiao’er” during the Song Dynasty and “bian shi” during the Yuan Dynasty, are fragrant and steaming hot—each bite brimming with New Year’s blessings, promising a new year filled with family togetherness, harmony, and peace.
set off firecrackers
Setting off firecrackers—a traditional custom—has a history of over 2,000 years in China! Today, whether it’s for Chinese New Year, other festive occasions, weddings, or milestones like starting school or advancing in one’s career, people still set off firecrackers to celebrate joyous events.
New Year's greetings
As for the origin of the New Year’s greeting custom, it’s actually closely related to the “Xi” beast we mentioned earlier. To this day, the custom of exchanging New Year’s greetings has continued unabated. Every year on the first day of the lunar new year, people rise early, dress themselves up neatly and beautifully, and go out to visit relatives and friends, exchanging New Year’s greetings and wishing each other great fortune and prosperity in the coming year!

 

 

The new year ushers in new hope.

A new blank canvas carries new dreams.

China Carbon Network wishes you a happy Spring Festival!

 

 

 

 

 

Keywords:

Jiasheng

Carbon