As Singapore celebrates Chinese New Year 2026, familiar traditions like reunion dinners, festive outfits, lion dances and red packets remain central to celebrations. What is changing is how these traditions are shared and discovered, especially among younger audiences.
From lion dance troupes sharing behind the scenes training to brands reinterpreting festive attire and rituals, TikTok has become a platform where cultural traditions are presented in more accessible and everyday ways.
This shift is also reflected in shopping behaviour. According to TikTok, last year TikTok Shop saw a 1.4x increase in womenswear GMV during the festive period, alongside a 1.2x uplift in livestream performance and growth in both buyers and sellers.
Balancing tradition with modern wearability
For local brands, designing Chinese New Year collections today often means respecting heritage while ensuring pieces remain wearable beyond the festive season.
Desleen Yeo, founder of YeoMama Batik, says their approach starts from authenticity:
“We create what we would genuinely wear and what our customers tell us they need. That keeps our collections feeling honest and relevant, rather than overly traditional or trend driven.”
The brand continues to honour traditional batik techniques and motifs while adapting silhouettes for comfort and everyday styling.
Fernnice Wong, founder of Modparade, takes a similar approach, blending oriental elements with contemporary design.
“We take reference from cheongsam inspired silhouettes and frog buttons, then reinterpret them through modern cuts and materials. This balance allows our CNY pieces to honour heritage without feeling overly traditional.”
Brands are also noticing changes in how consumers discover festive fashion.
Wong shares that customers increasingly encounter Chinese New Year pieces through TikTok content and livestreams rather than actively searching for them. The ability to see styling demonstrations, ask questions and purchase directly within the platform has made the process more interactive.
For YeoMama Batik, TikTok has opened access to a younger and more diverse audience, while creating opportunities to experiment with formats such as live selling when resources allow.
Chinese New Year traditions themselves remain unchanged, but platforms like TikTok are influencing how they are shared, discovered and kept relevant. For many brands and creators, digital storytelling is becoming another way to keep cultural practices visible for younger generations.
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