2026 Year of the Horse

Time to get this started…

JOHNNIE WALKER BLUE LABEL LUNAR NEW YEAR LIMITED EDITION DESIGN

Discover this limited-edition Johnnie Walker Blue Label Design by influential fashion designer, Robert Wun. The inspiration for his design comes from the auspicious symbolism of the horse, renowned for its bountiful strength and lasting resilience. Wun’s design also draws on the incredible layers of flavour in every drop of Johnnie Walker Blue Label.

70cl, 40%

OVERVIEW

Johnnie Walker X Robert Wun

Exceptional casks and masterful craftsmanship combine to create a vibrant Scotch Whisky with rolling waves of flavour and an unrivalled depth of character.

Our signature craft

The Johnnie Walker Blue Label Lunar New Year Limited Edition Year of the Horse bottle has been created by one of the most influential fashion designers in the world, Robert Wun. It houses Blue Label Blended Scotch Whisky: a velvety smooth and vibrant Scotch Blended Whisky made with layers of incredible flavour, including fruit, spice and a long, luxurious smokiness. Give the gift of depth this Lunar New Year.

RARE WHISKIES

WITH EXCEPTIONAL

DEPTHS.

SUMPTUOUS

WAVES OF SMOKE

An abstract 3D design with flowing, curved shapes. The shapes appear to be layered and have a smooth, fabric-like texture. The background is a dark blue, which contrasts with the lighter blue and red elements, creating a visually striking effect.

Close-up of a pink dahlia flower with layered petals and soft shading. The petals range in color from pale pink to peach, making them appear delicate and calm.

AromaRolling waves of subtle pepper and spice.

Abstract close-up of a bright yellow and orange liquid with gently flowing patterns and scattered bubbles creating an organic, dynamic texture.

AppearanceA deep golden colour that’s burnished in the light.

Smooth brown satin fabric with gentle folds and a shiny shimmer that reflects the light. The texture appears soft and luxurious, suggesting elegance and wealth.

PalateHazelnuts, citrus fruit, vanilla sweetness, and honey.

Close-up of glowing embers and charred pieces of wood in a vibrant fire, with bright orange and red sparks flying upwards against a dark background, creating a warm and dynamic scene.

FinishA luxuriously long, smoky finish.

A Johnnie Walker Blue Label bottle featuring a blue horse and Robert Wun on the label, set against an abstract blue and red wavy background.

MADE WITH UNPARALLELED RESERVES

Only one in 10,000 casks – including some from long-closed ‘ghost’ distilleries – are hand-selected to craft our exceptionally smooth Blue Label Scotch Whisky. All encased in a unique and beautiful bottle designed by Robert Wun.

A person with short, curly dark hair wearing a black blazer and shirt stands outdoors in sunlight, looking to the side. A blurred fence and building are in the background. Photo credit: @CHUCK REYES.

“I think there’s beauty in everything, if you put your heart, your soul and your craftsmanship and commitment into it. Being able to work with Johnnie Walker - a brand with such legacy and a strong identity – has been incredibly rewarding. Pushing boundaries is integral to storytelling, and that’s how I approach my work: how can I go further?"

ROBERT WUN

FASHION DESIGNER

Year of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, Flyover

Lifestyle photo of Limited Edition: Year of the Fire Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses

Year of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, Front

Year of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, Threequarter

Year of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, Pouch

Year of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, Back

Video of Year of the Fire Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses

Year of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, FlyoverLifestyle photo of Limited Edition: Year of the Fire Horse Fast Lanes SunglassesYear of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, FrontYear of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, ThreequarterYear of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, PouchYear of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, BackVideo of Year of the Fire Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses

FAST LANES

> # YEAR OF THE FIRE HORSE

$40

Year of the Horse Fast Lanes Sunglasses, Flyover

$40.00

PRODUCT DETAILS

DESCRIPTION

Every sixty years, the Fire Horse returns—powerful, untamed, impossible to ignore. These Year of the Fire Horse Fast Lanes feature deep translucent red frames ignited with bright gold accents and ember gradient lenses that fade like fire at dusk. Etched with the Fire Horse, a symbol of power, momentum, and fearless motion. Made for bold starts and unstoppable energy.

  • Polarized ember gradient lenses

  • Full UV400 eye protection

  • Deep transparent red frame with gold accents

  • Fire horse lens etch

  • Glossy finish

  • Gold K logos

  • Gold hinges

  • Gold eartip detail

  • Red patterned microfiber lens cleaning pouch included

  • FDA compliant impact resistant lenses

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# RIDING THE CLOUDS

  • Water resistant 3 Bar

  • Diameter 41.00 mm

  • Movement Quartz

$105.00

Our watches are delicately manufactured and sent from Switzerland. Your order can take three to four weeks to arrive in your country.

"RIDING THE CLOUDS" Image #2

RIDING THE CLOUDS

$105.00

  • 4 interest-free payments with

  • Free delivery

  • Secure online payment

  • Satisfaction guaranteed

DescriptionFeaturesSpecifications

This vibrant timepiece dedicated to the Year of the Horse was created in collaboration with former Swatch Art Peace Hotel artist-in-residence Yu Wenjie. The dial and matte transparent case feature two horses against a background of flames and drifting clouds in multi-colored print. Gold-colored hour and minute hands that glow in the dark and a gold-colored seconds hand point to the time. The multi-colored strap is also adorned with flames and cloud designs in multi-colored print and a matte transparent loop and buckle complete the watch.

SUOZ369

RIDING THE CLOUDS

RIDING THE CLOUDS

Celebrate the Year of the Horse

Rooted in Chinese art and culture, the design of RIDING THE CLOUDS is rich in symbolism. White and black horses embody yin and yang, while clouds and flames represent luck and prosperity.

The composition flows seamlessly from dial to strap, evoking traditional scroll paintings and protective bracelets from Chinese mythology.

Together, these elements unite cultural heritage with contemporary design in a truly distinctive creation.

LEGO® Lunar New Year gifts

Share something special this Lunar New Year with our range of LEGO® Lunar New Year gifts! From cute animals and powerful dragons, to beautiful flowers, to scenes of centuries old traditions, our gift sets are the perfect way to start the Lunar New Year. Find gifts for boys, girls and adults alike! With builds perfect as display sets and decorations, as well as engaging play, there’s something for everyone.

Products

[## Cry-Cry Horse ](One Foot Tsunami: Cry-Cry Horse)

Happy horse is out. Sad horse is in.

Tuesday, January 20th, 2026

Next month will mark the beginning of the Year of the Horse on the Chinese calendar. To celebrate, countless stuffed horse toys have been manufactured. At least a few had their entire mouth panel sewn on upside-down, and the result is darkly comic:

These forlorn and fearful horses are perfect. I have no notes. Compared to the “correct” version, there’s no question as to which is superior:

Sad and happy horses

Happy horse is a bland bit of nothingness. Sad horse speaks to my soul.

As a reader of this website, you will likely be unsurprised to learn that the Cry-Cry Horse has gone viral, and is now being intentionally manufactured, in record numbers.

# Olympian Eileen Gu to serve as grand marshal of SF Lunar New Year Parade

by: Amy Larson

Posted: Jan 21, 2026 / 02:48 PM PST

Updated: Jan 21, 2026 / 03:27 PM PST

Eileen Gu of Team China celebrates with her two gold medals and one silver medal after the Women’s Freeski Halfpipe medal ceremony on Day 14 of the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympic Games at Zhangjiakou Medal Plaza on February 18, 2022 in Zhangjiakou, Hebei Province of China. (Photo by VCG/VCG via Getty Images)

SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — This year’s Lunar New Year Parade in San Francisco will honor the “Year of the Horse,” and its grand marshal will be Olympic gold medalist Eileen Gu, event organizers announced Wednesday.

The San Francisco Chinese Chamber of Commerce and parade organizers unveiled anticipated highlights of the 2026 festival.

Lunar New Year’s Day will fall on Tuesday, February 17.

“Following last year’s record-breaking attendance of over one million visitors, the 2026 parade –the largest celebration of its kind outside of Asia — continues to showcase the vital cultural and economic contributions of the Chinese American community to San Francisco,” organizers wrote.

Gu is a freestyle skier for the Chinese Olympic Team and a San Francisco native. She won two gold medals at the 2022 Winter Olympics, and she’s slated to compete on the world stage again for the 2026 Winter Olympics.

Eileen Gu poses with her Laureus World Action Sportsperson of the year 2023 award on May 08, 2023 in Paris, France. (Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images for Laureus)

Throughout the months of February and March, there will be several Lunar New Year celebrations and events held in San Francisco’s Chinatown and the downtown corridor, including:

  • Flower Market Fair (Feb 14-15)

  • Choy Sun Doy Day (Feb 17),
    Basketball Jamboree (Feb 28)

  • Miss Chinatown USA (March 6)

  • Community Street Fair (March 7–8)

  • Parade (March 7)

Festivities aim to foster “Chi” — positive energy — and prosperity for local small businesses, organizers said.

[NEW] YAO MING LUNAR NEW YEAR “HORSE” LIMITED EDITION RED WINE 2023

Regular price$98.00

Shipping calculated at checkout.

# Is this ‘unlucky’ Lunar New Year chocolate mahjong set a sign of cultural appropriation?

A Hong Kong-based chocolate company is facing criticism for its Lunar New Year set, which features a winning hand known as ‘13 Orphans’

Reading Time:3 minutes

A box of Conspiracy Chocolate’s latest Lunar New Year collection showcases “mahjong tiles” displayed in a winning “13 Orphans” hand. The chocolate set has sparked a cultural appropriation debate over its unlucky symbolism. Photo: Conspiracy Chocolate

Ashlyn Chak

Published: 7:15am, 26 Jan 2026Updated: 7:59am, 26 Jan 2026

Mahjong has been an integral part of Chinese social life since its invention in the mid-1800s, during the late Qing dynasty. It took less than a century to reach the West, with a simplified playing system developing in the United States in the 1920s.

In modern-day Hong Kong, many older people play mahjong socially and to improve their brain health. The game is often played by people of all ages during festive occasions, as well as between strangers during competitive sessions at dedicated parlours.

With China’s soft power gaining pace in recent years, there has been a resurgence of appreciation for Chinese culture and the tile-based game has become popular in unexpected corners outside East Asia.

However, just as bubble tea – created in Taiwan in the 1980s – was at the centre of a cultural appropriation debate in October 2024, mahjong has suffered a similar fate.

Earlier this month, Hong Kong-based company Conspiracy Chocolate released its yearly limited-edition Mahjong Chocolate set to celebrate the coming Year of the Horse, featuring a winning hand known as sap saam jiuor “13 Orphans”.

Learn to play mahjong in 2.5 minutes

The chocolate maker, founded in 2018 by a Swiss and Israeli couple based in Hong Kong, called it the “royal flush of mahjong” in its press release. But while sap saam jiu is a famously strong winning hand, “13 orphans” sounds unlucky to even the least feng shui-inclined.

It is also a mismatched hand, linked to misfortune, and is sometimes likened to the mahjong move of discarding four West tiles consecutively, which, as urban legends say, can mean death for all four players, because the Cantonese for “west” sounds like “death”.

The chocolate set also features 14 tiles, a number that sounds a lot like “must die” in Cantonese. Many older buildings in Hong Kong skip the fourth and 14th floors for this reason, just as some buildings in the West avoid the number 13.

Hong Kong fashion worker Rey Sung says, “⁠⁠⁠I’m all about cultural appreciation; it’s awesome seeing Chinese culture be acknowledged and inspiring people.

“⁠⁠But when the culture you are referencing isn’t well researched or understood, that’s when it becomes ‘appropriation’. Rather than seeking to understand before capitalising, [it seems] a very surface-level understanding is used to create these products.”

Hong Kong-based Conspiracy Chocolate’s latest collection of mahjong tile-shaped sweets is inspired by the inauspicious winning hand, “13 Orphans”. Photo: Conspiracy Chocolate

Hong Kong-based Conspiracy Chocolate’s latest collection of mahjong tile-shaped sweets is inspired by the inauspicious winning hand, “13 Orphans”. Photo: Conspiracy Chocolate

She adds that, in this age of the internet and artificial intelligence, proper research before product development is “very easy” and that “knowledge is pretty much open source”. The people behind the company could have conducted research and consulted Chinese friends, or visited mahjong shops to talk to the people working there.

Responding to the Post’s inquiry, Conspiracy Chocolate says that the Lunar New Year collection was developed in consultation with local cultural advisers.

“We sought to honour the hand’s status as mahjong’s rarest and most auspicious combination – a symbol of perfect assembly and harmony, akin to a royal flush in poker,” says co-founder Amit Oz, who went to secondary school in Hong Kong, then left to join the Israel Defense Forces before settling back in the city.

“The superstition around ‘draining the luck pool’ is precisely why this set is designed for generosity and sharing,” he says. “Just as a player who wins with [sap saam jiu] shows humility and redistributes prosperity through gestures like lai see [red packets], our chocolate set is a tangible means to share this symbolic fortune with family and friends.”

He adds that the collection is conceived as “a sweet, communal catalyst for prosperity meant to be shared at the beginning of the year”.

Mahjong tiles made of chocolate from Conspiracy Chocolate. Photo: Conspiracy Chocolate

Mahjong tiles made of chocolate from Conspiracy Chocolate. Photo: Conspiracy Chocolate

None did mahjong as dirty as The Mahjong Line, a Texas-based mahjong set maker accused of cultural appropriation after it launched a “refreshed” – or rather, whitewashed – version of the game in 2020.

It was a total redesign. The traditional Chinese characters and symbols on the tile pieces were replaced with Western imagery such as a soldier, a castle, bubbles and bags of flour.

The Texan company’s three white women founders apologised in January 2021 for their “failure to pay proper homage to the game’s Chinese heritage” and use of words like “refresh”.

However, a quick scroll through the brand’s social media suggests the company has continued to change the symbols on its sets.

In an October 2025 post, The Mahjong Line, which now has more than 86,000 followers on Instagram, announced its new “Avocado Green Mahjong Tiles” that, with their floral motifs, looks like they come from a completely different game.

Texas company The Mahjong Line’s “Avocado Green Mahjong Tiles” are adorned with floral motifs. Photo: Instagram/themahjongline

Texas company The Mahjong Line’s “Avocado Green Mahjong Tiles” are adorned with floral motifs. Photo: Instagram/themahjongline

According to the Oxford Learner’s Dictionaries, the definition of “cultural appropriation” is “the act of copying or using the customs and traditions of a group or culture that is not your own, in a way that is considered to show a lack of respect or understanding”.

There is a difference between cultural appreciation and cultural appropriation. The line becomes painfully clear when it is crossed for profit by members of a historically more dominant and privileged people, with presumably little connection to the culture’s roots.

The cheapest full set on The Mahjong Line retails for just under HK$3,000 (US$380) when visiting the website from Hong Kong, whereas a machine-made set with true-to-origin designs can cost less than HK$500.

Ashlyn Chak

Ashlyn joined the Post’s culture desk in 2022. She holds two degrees from the University of the Arts London and launched her career in New York. Besides writing, she enjoys films that pass the Bechdel test, walkable cities, and spicy cocktails.

Read Chinese New Year 2026: Year of the Flaming Stud - my annual New Year’s blog.

And be sure to get your 2026 Year of the Horse apparel! Help support KFM!

T-shirts

Hoodies

## KUNG FU HOROSCOPES: YEAR OF THE FIRE HORSE

by Wilson Sun (with Gigi Oh and Gene Ching)

Check out our 2026 Year of the Horse T-shirts & Hoodies

Asian McDonalds ads hit different…

# Why the Adidas ‘Chinese New Year’ jacket has gone viral

Stephy Chung, CNN

Mon, February 16, 2026 at 4:41 PM PST

The jacket, worn here by Chinese fashion model He Cong, has been going viral on TikTok and other social media platforms. - Courtesy Adidas

The jacket, worn here by Chinese fashion model He Cong, has been going viral on TikTok and other social media platforms. - Courtesy Adidas

Every Lunar New Year, brands release zodiac animal-themed merchandise and items in the lucky color red. This year, there’s one product that has cut through all the noise: the Adidas Chinese Track Top.

It wasn’t explicitly marketed for the festive season, but has been unofficially dubbed the “Chinese New Year” or “Tang” jacket on TikTok and Instagram, where it’s been going viral over the past few months after the latest version debuted at Shanghai Fashion Week.

Initially only sold in China, and then a handful of Asian markets before becoming available in Europe in February, they have since become a holy grail among Gen Z — and emblematic of young people’s growing embrace of all things China.

The jacket’s nickname notes its resemblance to the Tang suit, a historic garment tracing back to China’s Qing dynasty, with an earlier iteration, the “ma gua,” worn by horse riders from the mid 17th century. They share some key design details: ornamental, knotted toggles, known as frog buttons or “pankou,” and a standing Mandarin collar.

One video titled “POV: your dad just came back from China,” which shows a man handing the tops out to family members from a suitcase, has been watched over 2.6 million times; another of a young woman walking the streets in a dark gray version has raked in over 1 million views across TikTok and Instagram. “Flew to China for this viral jacket. Soo worth it,” reads the accompanying caption.

CNN called Adidas stores in several major Chinese cities to find the jackets were either completely sold out or only available in certain colors. Online resellers like StockX now carry them for as much as $400.

It’s not the first time the German sportswear giant has riffed on Chinese aesthetics, and the success of their latest jackets isn’t just due to the classic formula of hype and scarcity. They’ve have dropped at a fascinating intersection of identity, internet culture and even geopolitics.

A model wears the Adidas Chinese Track Top at Shanghai Fashion Week on October 16, 2025. - Courtesy Adidas

A model wears the Adidas Chinese Track Top at Shanghai Fashion Week on October 16, 2025. - Courtesy Adidas

In recent years, young people in China have championed the “xinzhongshi,” or “new Chinese style,” trend, which contemporizes traditional design and reflects wearers’ rising confidence in their national and cultural identity. The term has been used as a marketing tool on the country’s lucrative e-commerce platforms and has played out on its streets, where modern takes on centuries-old garments like the “mamianqun,” or horse-face skirt, have become an increasingly common sight. Chinese fashion designers like Samuel Gui Yang have meanwhile been subtly weaving “Chineseness” into their designs for over a decade, often to exquisite effect.

The Adidas jacket arrives “during the continuing rise of the New Chinese Style, and many longstanding questions and answers about how to express modern Chinese identity in fashion,” said Sarah Cheang, a design historian at the UK’s Royal College of Art. Cheang added that the design offers a refreshing alternative to “stereotypical dragon motifs,” with its resemblance to Tang suits helping to “move the associations away from aggression and Chinese mythology, and slightly more towards Chinese traditions of contemplation, scholarship and more internal balance practices such as tai chi.”

Adidas says the jacket was created by its Shanghai-based design team targeting Chinese consumers as part of a wider strategy to design in — and for — the country’s domestic market. The company has also worked on Chinese New Year collaborations with homegrown designers, such as Gui Yang, and celebrities like the Canada-born Hong Kong actor and singer Edison Chen. (Sales figures suggest its localization efforts are paying off: Adidas reported a 10% increase in China revenues in 2024, a significant turnaround from a 36% drop in sales in the country in 2022).

Adidas Power of Three runway at Shanghai Fashion Week. According to Adidas, the company has worked to become a global brand with a local mindset over the past three years. - Courtesy Adidas

Adidas’ “Power of Three” runway at Shanghai Fashion Week. According to Adidas, the company has worked to become “a global brand with a local mindset” over the past three years. - Courtesy Adidas

But regardless of who the jacket was intended for, its quintessentially Chinese aesthetic has resonated globally. The buzz has coincided with the viral meme “You met me at a very Chinese time in my life,” part of a wider “Chinesemaxxing” trend that sees Gen Z posting their appreciation for aspects of Chinese culture, food, wellness and technology. The phenomenon appears to reflect disillusionment with the perceived instability and decline of the US as a superpower at a time when China’s standing in the world, and subsequent soft power, grows.

“It’s hitting at the right moment with this ‘becoming Chinese’ trend in the West and this overall shift towards a positive image of China and Chinese culture,” said Bohan Qiu, founder of Shanghai-based creative, PR and brand consultancy agency Boh Project. The jackets are “the perfect armor, or piece of fashion, to tie this trend together.”

Other looks on the runway incorporated Chinese design elements onto peplum jackets and cardigans. - Courtesy Adidas

Other looks on the runway incorporated Chinese design elements onto peplum jackets and cardigans. - Courtesy Adidas

Social media users have also been poking fun at how popular the jackets are among the Asian diaspora. In a humorous TikTok video, Toronto-based content creator Chris Zou says he bought three and recounts — while wearing his burgundy one — the moment when he visited China and realized that “all the people who are buying and wearing these jackets out here in public, are not even Chinese — they’re like Singaporeans, Malaysians, Americans, Australians.”

“Does wearing this jacket make me look like a foreigner?” he recalled asking locals, to which they replied: “Um, you kinda just look like an overseas Chinese who is desperately trying to reconnect with their roots.”

Elsewhere, in a skit widely shared on Instagram and viewed over 400,000 times, Sam Li and Quentin Nguyen-Duy play two young Asian Americans heading to Asia to “reconnect with their roots.” The duo — who had to borrow jackets from friends, since they were sold out in every Adidas store they visited in Taipei, Taiwan, where they were filming — are seen smoking cigarettes while squatting and saying “Ni-howdy” to passersby as they bumble through the city attempting to tap into local culture.

Nguyen-Duy told CNN the jacket was an essential prop, as “it’s the best visual representation…of Asian Americans trying to become more Asian, as the years go on, in kind of a performative way.”

“For me, it was seeing my (Asian) friends who grew up in America, whether it’s San Mateo or San Francisco, the Bay Area or upstate New York… doing the unboxing and saying, in a Californian accent, ‘Hey guys, check out this new, viral, Mandarin-style jacket,” laughed Li, who is Chinese American. “I thought it was this interesting dichotomy of someone who is in a lot of ways, very American, experiencing Asian culture but through Adidas.”

Fun aside, Nguyen-Duy believes international interest emerged because “an incredibly recognizable brand” has “taken Chinese design and blended it in a very mainstream and accessible way.”

Qiu echoed the sentiment, calling the jacket “a door-opening item that will lead more people to want to discover Chinese style.” He added that some designers in China have already moved beyond incorporating traditional Chinese design to what he called the “next phase” — a deeper approach to making clothes grounded not just in Chinese heritage but also philosophy.

“Pankou” fastenings are only “cracking the surface.”

“There’s an infinite amount of references one can take from Chinese design and dressing, because it has such a long history. All the dynasties have different design elements and techniques and way of clothes-making.”