Busts of two noble women of the Qing Dynasty were dressed in royal blue and bright yellow satin Qing Dynasty plaids, embroidered with peony patterns on the collars, and cuffs were inlaid with golden threads and piping. The headdress adopts a large dotted wing shape, the hairpin on the left is silver-plated gold-plated silk butterfly pressed on the temples with coral tassels, and the figure on the right is decorated with velvet flowers and peonies embedded in pearls and rice beads. The background is blurred with the eaves of traditional buildings, and the blue brick walls and vermilion lacquer columns can be vaguely visible, and the silk luster is enhanced by Rembrandt's light. The woman on the left hand holds a kesi fan in her left hand and half-covers her face. Her right hand gently caresses the coral tassels on her temples. Her eyebrows and eyes droop down and she looks shy. The corners of her lips raise a 15° smile curve. The woman on the right side has her hands crossed and held a jasper-handled gauze lamp, her lower jaw slightly raised shows her dignified demeanor, her phoenix eyes stared at the figure on the left, and her lips seemed to be opened but not opened to show a moment of dialogue. The two shoulders form a 20° inclination angle to form a visual interaction, and the extension lines of the red lacquer gallery columns intersect at the flare of the yarn lamp.