Baisha Ancient Town has a thousand years of history, Mushi began to draw spring water from the Yulong Snow Mountain to pass through the center of the commercial square, and later in Dayan will play the wonderfulness of the flowing water to the fullest. Baisha Ancient Town is very developed in commerce and handicrafts. Before liberation, there were more than 150 copper workshops in Baisha. The copperware is mainly used for copper hot pot, copper pot, copper pot, copper foil, oil lamps and other items needed by Tibetan areas and surrounding ethnic minorities. But for the reasons of post-liberation history, there is only one on Baisha Street. Still insisting on hand-drawing copper. White sand textile and hand-made embroidery has also been very developed. Historically, Naxi embroidery mainly focuses on the daily necessities, paintings and Tibetan Tangka of local tribal chiefs and dignitaries. The folk mainly focus on "stars and moons", waist, back, shoes, insoles. Before liberation, almost everyone embroidered by Naxi and surrounding ethnic minority women, who were centered on Baisha, and almost everyone embroidered. After liberation, there are few good embroidery masters because of the Cultural Revolution and mechanization. The current government-focused Lijiang Jinxiu Vocational Training School, Baisha Jinxiu Art Academy is digging, finishing, inheriting, training and promoting traditional hand-made embroidery. Baisha Splendid Art Academy, between the parking lot and Sifang Street, is a typical Naxi courtyard complex, with four yards, antique, the ground is auspicious pattern of traditional craft tiles and goose warm stone paving, doors and windows are old and very particular, very tasteful. Baisha Splendid Art Academy is a demonstration base for ethnic embroidery and Dongba culture inheritance, promotion and women's employment supported by the local government. Here you can not only appreciate the beauty of Naxi's traditional architectural courtyard, but also appreciate the cultural dinner of ethnic embroidery, which is very shocking. Some people create embroidery on the spot, and there are also high-school and low-end works available for purchase in the exhibition hall, but there are still differences in the price of handmade artwork and cross-stitch and machine embroidery. There is no ticket, it is worth visiting.