
In rural schools across western China, a set of safety-designed tungsten steel cutting blades (featuring rounded tips and depth-limiting mechanisms)
has been distributed as part of the "Intangible Cultural Heritage Art Education Kit."
Students use them to cut window paper decorations, create shadow puppets, and engage with culture through hands-on practice.
Teachers have noted, "They are more precise than plastic blades and safer than regular knives."
The project lead remarked, "A well-designed tool can ignite children’s passion for tradition." Educational equity begins with access to the right tools.