1 交領/交领/jiao1 ling3/Crossed Collar
2 立領/立领/li4 ling3/Standing Collar
3 對襟/对襟/dui4 jin4/Parallel Collar
4 斜襟/斜襟/xie2 jin4/Diagonal Collar
5 合領/合领/he2 ling3/Adjacent Collar
6 圓領/圆领/yuan2 ling3/Round Collar
7 方領/方领/fang1 ling3/Square Collar
8 對穿交/对穿交/dui4 chuan1 jiao1/Cross-Worn Collar
9 袒領/袒领/tan1 ling3/U-Shaped Collar
10 垂領/垂领/chui2 ling3/Drooping Collar
11 曲領/曲领/qu1 ling3/Curved Collar
交領/交领/jiao1 ling3/Crossed Collar
Probably the first type of collar that you’ll see—the crossed collar, or jiaoling. This collar consists of two overlapping pieces and is usually secured with two to three ties, with a thicker or contrasting border along the edge of each piece. It’s almost always right over left, or if you think about it in terms of how to put it on, you tie the left ties before you tie the right ties. The result is a y-shaped collar when viewed from the front. Ming dynasty people may have done it the other way, as well as various non-Han groups and clothes put on the deceased at funerals, but it’s generally a good rule of thumb to follow right over left. as it’s one of the most important cultural concepts in hanfu. These can be shallow or deep, the cross occurring just below your neck or at the center of your torso, depending on the style.
立領/立领/li4 ling3/Standing Collar
A trademark of the Ming dynasty, the liling or standing collar is a stiff collar that stands up at the neck sort of like a turtleneck, with the center rounding down to the base of the neck, where the left and right sides are connected by a button or clasp. Further down the neck into the torso, these are combined with the parallel or diagonal collar below. It’s also referred to as the 竖領/竖领/shu4 ling3/vertical collar. There's also a way of wearing this collar called 翻領/翻领/fan3 ling3/turned collar, where you essentially fold down the standing collar to reveal the inner lining, which can be in a different color.
對襟/对襟/dui4 jin4/Parallel Collar
Another ubiquitous collar in hanfu, the parallel collar is often seen in outerwear pre-Ming dynasty and in the shan and ao of Ming dynasty tops. For the Ming dynasty parallel collar, this means that after the standing collar ends, the left and right halves of the top are symmetrical and buttoned together down the front with buttons or clasps, as pictured in the liling collar section. Other duijin collars are usually open and also have left and right halves straight down the front with a slight space in between, as pictured above, and are also called 直領/直领/zhi2 ling3/straight collars. They may have a tie in the middle or not.
斜襟/斜襟/xie2 jin4/Diagonal Collar
This is the alternative option to the duijin collar for the liling collar. Also called 大襟/大襟/da4 jin4/largre collar, this collar slopes down diagonally from the end of the standing collar to the wearer’s right, ending on the armpit of the wearer’s right side, secured by buttons, clasps, or ties. This and the parallel collar, the ones ending in jin, refer less to the collar itself than how the rest of the fabric is arranged down the front: symmetrically, or diagonally.
合領/合领/he2 ling3/Adjacent Collar
The heling collar is very similar to the parallel or straight collar, but the top half of the collar slants slightly towards the middle to come together in the middle, then hang straight down. Most often seen in Song and Ming dynasty outerwear, and pretty much exclusively constructed in shan and not ao, this variety is usually worn open and not tied or clasped together, but can also be installed with ties or buttons to keep them closed. The Song dynasty 折领/折領/zhe2 ling3/folded collar also follows a similar template with the sides of the collar folded back on themselves and stitched in place.
圓領/圆领/yuan2 ling3/Round Collar
The round collar is most well-known as part of the 圓領袍/圆领袍/yuan2 ling3 pao2/round collar robe, but appears in all sorts of hanfu—Tang dynasty underlayers, for example, have a lot of round collar versions, and Ming dynasty aos and shans often take a yuanling-duijin form. Most yuanling are yuanling-dajin, secured with four buttons, two at each side of the neck and two halfway down the body, so that there’s a section of the middle that overlaps, but from the Tang to Ming dynasties, the amount that the pieces of fabric overlap can change.
For example, the Tang dynasty round collar stands up slightly from the neck and is often turned outwards to be worn in a 翻領/翻领/fan3 ling3/turned collar, while the Song and Ming varieties aren’t perfectly symmetrical and don't have that feature. The duijin type of round collar in Ming dynasty hanfu follows the same rules as the liling duijin collar, with a round collar that’s separated into left and right pieces but clasped down the middle with buttons.