Re-imagined Asian folktale layered on Western fairytales to showcase some Asian (specifically Chinese - given that there are similarities/commonalities with Korean and Japanese) folklore, flora and fauna, costumes, customs, including historical information based on settings to engage the audience.

Just as Walt Disney used classic fairytales with changed endings to fit the happily ever after narrative, and how Hayao Miyazaki used Western literature adjusted for the regional audience, these re-imagined fairytales would primarily use Asian foundations layered with Western fairytale stories.

This series is inspired by existing Chinese version of Cinderella (Yeh Shen), Red Riding Hood (Auntie Tiger). It is meant to mimic how a UK picture book 'The Gruffalo' was based on a Chinese folktale (The Fox that Borrows the Terror of a Tiger) – almost a reverse Hayao Miyazaki.

Series potential lineup:

1.) Hong2Mao1Mao4: Red Riding Hood mashup with the nine-tailed fox, plus the three little pigs, Chinese Moon Goddess, Chang'e with Jade Rabbit and the Red Thread folktale.

2.) Princess Shaolin and the Nordic Pea: re-imagine Princess and the Pea story set in a Scandinavian world with a Ming Dynasty Princess and includes the Shaolin Kung fu and Scandinavian trolls.

3.) Not Cinderella: re-imagine story of Yeh Shen and Cinderella set in Song Dynasty

4.) Alice in Han Land: re-imagine Alice in Wonderland set in: Tang Dynasty to Early Han Dynasty, using motifs, flora and fauna of East Asian mythologies. 5.) possible addition: Thumbelina: showing various male stereotypes, Beauty and the Beast: mixed with the Chinese version of ‘The Fairy Serpent’.