Beijing rolled out a gleaming red carpet for Asia-Pacific leaders garbed in sleek, high-collared Chinese tunics as it kicked off a regional summit in spectacular fashion today.
Despite their diplomatic differences Xi Jinping, US President Barack Obama and his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin were united in imperial purple for a group photo, with the visitor from Moscow given pride of place next to the host.
Obama was also in the front row, a few places to Xi's left, but Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe -- in green -- was relegated to the back, next to New Zealand's John Key.
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The leaders at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) gathering were driven to the dinner venue -- the glowing blue Water Cube that saw the swimming events at the 2008 Beijing Olympics -- along a road glowing a rich nationalist Chinese red.
Hundreds of wildly cheering dancers dressed in the costumes of China's dozens of ethnic minorities lined the route with the surrounding area bathed in rippling greens, yellows and blues, in a visual echo of the Games' spectacular opening.
Most leaders arrived in blocky China-made "Red Flag" limousines, but Obama stuck with his official ride, a hyper-secure vehicle known as "The Beast".
The "family photo" in the host country's traditional clothing is a fixture at the annual gathering.
This year's fashion choice was based on the "Mao suit" tunics once beloved by China's leaders, but given an elegant, silky look in lustrous purple, green or brown.
Female leaders wore long embroidered buttoned jackets, while the wives were clad in high-necked tunics draped with a loose jacket.
The tradition began when US President Bill Clinton handed out leather bomber jackets in Seattle in 1993. Leaders also donned blue-and-gold South Korean silk overcoats called durumagi in 2005, followed the next year by flowing silk ao dai tunics in Hanoi.
But in Peru, 2008 world leaders were pictured during the global financial crisis "wearing ponchos, smiling and waving" in costumes that unkind critics likened to potato sacks.
It was seen as "not really appropriate" in the circumstances, acknowledged APEC spokesman David Hendrickson, and the practice was quietly dropped.