The difference between "leisure and elegance" and "leisure and elegance":
"leisure and elegance" refers to the attitude towards life, and "leisure and elegance" refers to the leisurely mood. However, there is no essential difference between the two and they can be used interchangeably as synonyms. Leisure and elegance: elegance, ease; zhi: interest; meaning leisurely mood and comfortable interest. Leisurely mood: leisurely mood, comfortable interest.
"Leisurely Elegance" comes from Liang Heng's "A Feeling of Summer": "People with leisurely elegance naturally don't like this kind of tense melody." It is explained as a leisurely mood in "Summer Feeling". "Leisure and Ease" comes from the 100th chapter of Li Ruzhen's "Flowers in the Mirror" in the Qing Dynasty: "At this time, there was war and chaos everywhere, the Qin Dynasty and the late Chu Dynasty. I reluctantly made an "Old Book of Tang", where I still had the leisure to write this ink."