Using REFERENCE_0 and REFERENCE_1,
create a clean ethnographic archive plate focused on the ceremonial hat. Use REFERENCE_0 as the historical Tibetan context and silhouette reference,
and REFERENCE_1 as the color,
material,
and ornament reference for the hat. Isolate and reconstruct the hat as a museum-style object study,
removing the seated body as the main subject. Present the hat on an off-white document page as a scholarly catalog sheet in Chinese with small romanization. Add 8 numbered callouts around the object with fine dashed leader lines,
each pointing to a specific structural detail. The centerpiece should be one large three-quarter underside view of the hat. Also include exactly 4 supplementary views/details: 1 side-profile wearing sketch with a faint line-drawn bust,
1 underside interior view,
1 top-down view,
and 2 square close-up material swatches. Add exactly 4 thread-color samples near the lower right: blue,
red,
white,
and yellow. At the top center,
add the large title {
argument name="headline text" default="唐徐帽"
} with the romanization {
argument name="romanization" default="(thang zhwa)"
} beneath it,
plus a smaller subtitle describing it as a summer ceremonial hat of high-ranking Tibetan monks. In the upper left,
add a boxed metadata panel with multiple short Chinese fields,
and in the upper right add a plate number reading {
argument name="plate number" default="图版 No. 27"
}. At the bottom,
add one bordered note paragraph in Chinese. Overall style: meticulous archival infographic,
anthropological catalog illustration,
historically informed,
precise woven texture,
ivory-gold base with blue and red ornament,
elegant print layout,
thin rules and decorative divider marks,
high-detail object rendering on a plain paper background.