Her Haughtynesses Decree

Showing posts with label Kitsuke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kitsuke. Show all posts

Sunday, November 12, 2023

宇野 千代 | Uno Chiyo | 1936 - 1960 | Essay #22

This essay explores the work of Uno Chiyo (1897-1996) as a Kimono Designer. Uno was a prolific 20th century Japanese writer and designer. As such, Uno was familiar and fluently versed in KTC throughout her life. Uno founded the influential Style which was in circulation in Japan from 1936-1959.[1] Uno was heavily influenced by Western and Genroku fashion, and focused her aesthetic on these two whilst encouraging masculine and secondhand consumer habits in her approach to Kimono as a fashionable and modern pursuit. Uno provides a fascinating glimpse into a time before Kimono were stigmatized and were instead merged with Yofuku to inform Japanese identity and femininity in new and stylish publications and normoactivities.

Uno Chiyo (1935, PD) 白拍子花子

Uno led a fabulous devious life in her early years, losing her first job due to the stodgy old men of the time who fired her upon discovering her affair with a male colleague in 1915. She became a writer by 1920 and it was hereafter she began to attain literary success in Japan. In 1921, she won a prize for her 1921 short story しふんのかお ( Shifun no Kao | Painted Face)、where afterwards she moved to Tokyo. This drove her into the 1920's urban cultural scenes of Art, Fashion and publishing. It was during this time that she developed her specific outlook and relationships to the major influences and artistic avenues which she pursued in her life as Japanese woman living in the 20th century.

Atarashii Onna

Uno was influenced by the times she lived in, and was repletely surrounded by the influence of Western design and fashion. In 1927 for example, she joined the fashion for Moga, and bobbed her hair and entered into the cultural era of the 'New Woman' which had become emblematic of what some called the 'Jazz Age' and the 'Liberated Woman'. The New Woman, which itself was a trope which came from the writing of British writer Sarah Grand (1854–1943) in 1894 which called for the liberation and emancipation of contemporary Victorian women in their bid for independence from patriarchal systems and oppression.[4]

This was taken up in English society and expanded upon by Maria L R Ouida (1839-1908) used the term in a response article entitled 'The New Woman'. The English writer and editor Ella Hepworth Dixon (1857–1932) also reproduced this in her is novel 'The Story of a Modern Woman'.[3] All of these writings expanded on the idea of women encouraging a human sisterhood common to all in the face of the strife faced in the Victorian and Edwardian age, be it financial, emotional, physical etcetera. They encouraged those women with enough money to uplift those without it, to live their lives independently and to foster a modern sensibility of female agency and embodiment of those ideals. This became a wave of popular modern conscious though in Britain by 1913 with issues like the Cat and Mouse Act, which called for universal suffrage to women over 25 with property soon earning the right to vote in Britain.

Women of course have always done these things, but have had to work within the limits of their day and age and thus are not always given the respect they deserved as human beings and so are not as well represented, recorded or even remembered as they could be, and thus this was their pushing against these systems and structures which denied them their creativity, their work, their social lives and their autonomy. This modern image of womanhood was taken forwards across the Empire, infamously across the Atlantic Ocean into North America. British writers such as Indian-born Annie Sophie Cory (1868–1952) The Woman Who Didn't (1895) deeply held and spread these ideals and celebrated women such as Bengali writer Toru Dutt (তরু দত্ত | 1856-1877), English Amy Judith Levy (1861-1889) South African Olive Schreiner (1855-1920), Australian Mary Chavelita Dunne Bright (1859-1945), Indian Kodagina Gowramma (1912-1939) who already lived these experiences around the British Empire. As one British child of Empire wrote:

'We must kill the force in us that says we cannot become all we desire, for that force is our evil star that turns all opportunity into grotesque failure....So let us each recognise the truth that our first business is to change ourselves, and then we shall know how to change our circumstances.' 

- Florence Beatrice Emery (1860-1917; Our Evil Stars, New Age October 1907)[2]

In Japan, the modern woman was spread both directly as a result of British Women, and via women who lived in and outside of Britains Empirical Domains. The Japanese Magazine Seito (Bluestocking) drew on this British legacy, gaining its namesake from the British society of the same name which operated in the 18th century, which first published in Japan in 1911.

Bad Wife, Dumb Mother, Usurping Student

By the 1900s, this well versed and influential feminine archetype had spread internationally. However this spread more slowly in conservative and patriarchal societies and cultures. Across East Asia, this generally meant that the New Woman genre only became popular by later decades, for example in the case of the writings of Ling Ding (丁玲 | 1904-1986) who was persecuted in China for her writings, and was imprisoned in 1933.[5] Korean chauvinists eagerly followed on with, dismissing the learned feminine as simply a caricature of Western capitalism. They urged women instead to be their Gibson girl ideal, a male caricature ideal of a woman who not career driven, but instead was busy chasing after her children in the domestic sphere and perhaps staring at an aesthetic copy of the Confucian and Chinese classics, all of which our male writers kindly informed us all placed women in the proverbial kitchen, making not sandwiches who supposedly were responsible for all of Japan Inc's all seeing grip on the Korean economy.[3] 


Ding Ling (c.1930, PD) Zanhe | 'Dancers' (1927, CC4.0) Na Hye-seok

The Korean Modern Woman writer and artist Na Hye-seok (나혜석 | 1896-1948) published Sinyoja (New Woman) was Chiyo's Korean counterpart, who wrote on Korean clothing and was writing in similar circumstances. Educated women in both countries combated male ideals of women such as Hyeonmo Yangcheo (현모양처 | wise mother and good wife) or Wise Wife, Good Mother (良妻賢母) were coined from 1875 by East Asian men towards women who operated in East Asia in the 19th and 20th centuries, in their writings and published work from the 1910s on, often risking their marriages, finances and social standing in doing so, much as Uno did on losing her job as a result of her 'lifestyle choices'. These Asian writers often promoted ideals of pursuing ones own desires as a woman, independent of what patriarchal systems told women to do so. However it was not until the 1930s that universal suffrage became a topic in Japanese politics meaning the Modern Women became the Modern Girl as a result of a lack of change in Japanese society towards the feminine, leading to the world Uno began her career in as Moga.[1][4]

Tipsy (1930, PD) Kobayakawa Kiyoshi

Sutairu

In 1936 Uno founded one of Japan's first fashion magazines, these were a rather niche market at the time of women's magazines published in Japan. As one of the first women in Tokyo to live the life of a Naomi (see Chijin no Ai, 1925), Uno lived a heady lifestyle in the circles of Tokyo poets, artists, designers, publishers and their patrons who all moved in each others social circles. The modern women who Uno wrote about, for and with all tread a grey area where dress was an important marker of the time. Stepping too far into Western clothing was considered too much, albeit that their male counterparts had been doing this for decades and were considered masculine. A whole ensemble was too much, but a glove was acceptable.[6] Only wearing purely 'Wa'fuku was considered very conservative and uptight, a strange double standard which denoted ones place in society as a second class subject and the political spectrum. 

Uno's founding her magazine then, can be seen as a rebellion against the traditional and morally acceptable standards of the frugal Shufu archetype popular in the mainstream magazine offerings of the likes of Shufu no Tomo (Housewives Friend). It focused on the needs women had, raising them to the mantle of the independent woman with purchasing power, a scary notion for those upholding systems which said women could not have their own money. Sutairu (スタイル | Style) covered a range of topics, but included both Yofuku and Wafuku and was the first to include fashion trends started or used outside Japan. This was a departure from the expected intentions of marketing to women, as previously you could deprive, degrade and dismiss women as agents with autonomy, but they could be trusted to make their way down to the department store, to be paid less for modelling in Kuchi-E than male counterparts and to be used to make revenue from and marketed towards by male owned companies and magazines but not to be thought of as smart, innovative or worthy of attention.[6]

Sutairu instead aimed itself at young female demographics, teaching them to be thrifty, modern and elegant year round. Sutairu threw off the rules of old and utilized plain and 'exotic' fabrics to bring interesting new combinations and styles to Japanese Kimono, a style Uno referred to as the 'New Kimono'.[12] Uno also encouraged her readers to utilize fabrics from Asia, like Black Velvet and natural fabrics which originated in Japan and India, particularly in fashions like Black Satin Eri which revitilised older Meiji era Kimono in 1937.[12]

Sutairu also promoted from the second issue street photography, which praised the thrift and innovation of Japanese women during rationing as modern cosmopolitan consumers.[12] Whilst at the time to promote local Japan Inc. economies, Meisen for winter was all the rage, Uno instead taught women to use fashionable attire in Summer, and to be thrifty with new materials for their Obi, such as upcycling old fabrics for the winter.[12] Sutairu's style choices harkened back to the Genroku Period (1688-1704), a time in which JKTC was at some of its most garish and vulgar.[13] Silver lame Kimono, Velveteen accessories, Leather Sandals and bold patterns all featured amongst recommended articles Uno published from 1936-1938. Other style pointers included using the lining of the Tombi style overcoat to arken back to the Sumptuary Laws of the Genroku period to include a flashy fabric such as Tartan sparingly.[12][14]

Seeing as these garments were made from Wool, it replaced the need to layer multiple garments over other Kimono as had previously been done and changed the winter silhouette for a time. Japan Wool Textile Co., Ltd was an early introducer of Wool as part of KTC when it began production in 1896.[1] It was in this time when the importation of Wool was particularly high, with most imports coming from England and Germany in 1898.[5] The suppliers of Wool of at this time came mostly from Western Mills, such as the A W Hainsworth Mill (est.1793), which in 1899 recieved an order for 'Black serge' wool to be delivered to Yokohama. This saw the introduction of new types of overcoats and capes such as the Tombi, Nijuumawashi, and Azumakouto.[14]

From 1937 on, Uno discussed how her own Kimono making processes involved the use of fabrics like wool serge to replace other winter fabrics and to recreate the feeling of deep blue Kimono for women, a transgressive act for a woman at the time given that patriarchal values were beginning to set in again with the advent of the Pacfic War with China beginning. Whilst this may be a reflection of the move towards patriotism with plain and militaristic colours like navy blue and green, floral motifs were also popular in Sutairu that year. She also encouraged her readers to begin wearing secondhand Kimono once again.[12] By 1938, Uno encouraged more women to adopt these masculine fabrics and then also to have a Meisen Kimono, but with large and bold patterns with Uno's favourite Black accent accessory with a pinstripe or Kasuri Kimono and hand painted Geta.[12]

After this time Sutairu seems to have encouraged the adoption of Western accessories, foreign origin fabrics, vintage Kimono and Genroku period fashions which may be regarded as a precursor to many of the Dori-Style Kimono worn in the 2010s, and Revival Style fashions of the 1990s which paired together bright colours and styles with the traditional and paired down Kimono often found in the markets their owners purchased their Kimono from.[12] During the 1940s, Uno successfully became a designer and writer, focusing her time on both of these and some film ventures. During this time, her Kimono become very Genroku influenced, with singular bold patterns trailing around Kimono, reflecting the Ma of Genroku Kimono. Her designs were also influenced by more Western paintings and ideas it seems, incorporating more of these fantastical exotic fabrics and masculine ideals of dressing until the end of the war, when afterwards her designs returned to a more Genroku influenced tone with some pared back yukata designs in the mix. 

Sutairu at this time was likely to have undergone censorship from SCAP regulations, and therefore may have focused more so on Japanese domestic affairs or incorporated more Yofuku than it may previously have done so willingly.

Occidentals beginnings in Fashion

Uno brought fashion for the first time to the Occidentals in the 1950s, bringing Wafuku together with Western art theory and graphical design principals in line with Japanese sensibilities towards designing Kimono. In this way, Uno introduced a great many Westerners, Europeans and Americans to how Kimono could be thought of, worn and style rather than simply being a 'traditional costume' from Japan. Rather it grounded the Kimono in a history of art theory and applied workmanship from Japan, with Western design and motifs familiar to them which allowed Kimono to become fashionable aesthetic pieces of art outside of Japan, in a far more respectful manner than the second plundering of Japanese wardrobes which occurred under American occupation in the aftermath of the Pacific and Second World War.

By 1954, Uno seems to have become a successfully regarded Kimono designer, incorporating classical motifs into modern designs which whilst not entirely stale are not totally ground breaking either, but she often used her clout in publishing to guest edit it seems so that her designs and tastes influenced trends well into the 1950s for Kimono, which was really on of the last few decades were Kimono were still produced en masse and bought by a wide audience.[10] In 1957, she flew to North America where she hosted one of the first Kimono Fashion Shows there, one of which seems to have included Piet Mondrian's Landscape paintings series.[1][9] 

Even after Sutairu folded in 1959, Uno still was regarded as a tastemaker in Wafuku related matters and continued to be sought after for her opinion on the matter well into the 1980s and 1990s until her death in 1996.[11] Modern Japanese KTC has been influenced by Uno's Hanami and Sakura designs which became popular during the early 1950s and were used in both Yukata and Furoshiki.[7][8] 

Conclusion

In context therefore, we can see how the international political and modern interpretation of Japanese and British culture lead to an emancipated and forward thinking adoption of Yofuku as a symbol of Japanese Women's struggle to become full persons. Uno introduced and used Kimono to bring herself financial and social independence and gave this to her readers and characters by embodying the trope of the New Woman in the course of her time as a Kimono designer and publisher. Uno used Sutairu to finally meld the Modern Girl with the Modern Woman trope, and she did this by using Modern design principles and Art n her designs and in carefully curating what she presented to her audiences from the 1930's into the 1950s whilst working within the constraints and limitations of her time.

Bibliography

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiyo_Uno

[2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florence_Farr#Later_life

[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Woman

[4] https://collections.reading.ac.uk/special-collections/2022/12/16/the-new-woman-five-women-writers-of-the-1890s/

[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ding_Ling

[6] https://www.myjapanesehanga.com/home/articles/bijin-kuchi-e-and-taisho-era-popular-magazines.html

[7] https://kyoto-asahiya.com/products/polyester-furoshiki-chiyo-uno-hanasakizakura

[8] https://www.akariya2.com/kimono2015-5-27.html

[9] https://twitter.com/tsubaki_an/status/772440228942319616

[10] https://www.kosho.or.jp/products/detail.php?product_id=330716252

[11] https://ameblo.jp/yoshiko-artlife/entry-12256427146.html

[12] A Study on “New Kimono” in the Magazine SUTAIRU edited by UNO Chiyo, Matsuo Ryoko, 2023, pp.165-175, Volume 16 Yamaguchi Prefectural University | https://ypir.lib.yamaguchi-u.ac.jp/yp/journals/yp000005/v/16/i/%E5%9B%BD%E9%9A%9B%E6%96%87%E5%8C%96%E5%AD%A6%E9%83%A8%E7%B4%80%E8%A6%81/item/1754

[13] See Essay #8

[14] See Fabric #12

Essay Abstracts 

#1 Renee Vivien (1877 - 1909) --- Born Pauline Tarn, was an English lesbian poet. She wrote in French and perhaps English. She took up the style of the Symbolists and Parnassinism and was well known during the era of the Belle Epoque (the Beautiful Age) for producing Sapphic verse and living as an open quasi butch lesbian poet; her verse derived from the ancient poet Sapphos, also famed for her love of women.

# 2 Birth of the Kimonope --- Here I shall introduce the notion of the Kimonope, that is as a garment attached to the social construct of the 'Geisha' in North America. Kimonopes being Orientalized clothing, or 'negatively affiliated or exoticized ethnic dress' which lead to the perceived notion of the Kimono and Geiko as simultaneously both high and low culture to American culture makers, such as film, television, media, writers and some academics. An example of Kimonope are the tacky Halloween costumes you may find at the Dollar store.

#3 The Legacy of the MacArthur Dynasty on KTC & The Problem with the 'Traditional Garment' Argument --- The problem with arguing that the Kimono is a 'Traditional ethnic Garment' is that that assertion is in itself, arguably  Ethnocentrism, which to clarify is the imposition of, in this case, American values onto Japanese cultural values, belaying the 3 pronged pitchfork of idiocy. 

#4 Divine --- Government name Harris Glenn Milstead (1945-1988) was the infamous North American Queen & Drag artist. Specifically, Divine was known for being a character actor, part of her act is well-known for its eccentricity. My personal exposure to Drag lite was Pantomine Grand Dames as a kid, and later when my friends made me watch RuPaul in art classes, so to me this is nothing new, the over the top, the glitter, the upstaging is all part and parcel.

#5 Dori-Style or 21st century Kimono Fashion --- The Dori-Kimono style. Something which I just made up because in going over notes for the first 20 years of 21st century section of Kimono history, I noticed a lack of a clear catchall term for what was happening in Japan at the time, at least in English descriptions of the time. I use the term Dori as I do not want to coin an unrelated term to the topic, but I also am reticent to claim all of Street style as 'Tori' either, whilst a large number of streets upon which the subculture originates in all use the suffix 'dori' (the bottom of Takeshita-dori for example), thence Dori-style.

#6  The Tea Gown --- This essay will cover the aspects of how 19th century Japanese import textiles to Western countries were used and repurposed, as well what their desirability tells us about how Japanese design was regarded and the image which these people held of Japan through the Western lense and consciousness. This follows the progression of how Kimono can be used in the West from the undress of the 1860s, adapting silk bolts in the 1870s to high fashion western daywear, to the 1880s aesthetic movement and 1890 wholesale adoption in the Victorian age to being used prominently by society hostesses as tea gowns by the Edwardian period, and the subsequent change in Japanese export culture which we see in extant textile collections of Japanese textile in Western dresses of the periods.

#7 Kimono and the Pre-Raphaelite Painters --- This essay will cover the aspects of Kimono in the Portraiture of the Pre-Raphaelites. The Pre-Raphaelites were a group of British artists and writers active during the late Victorian period. Unlike the Royal Academy artists, this circle of painters operated outside of the established comfortable boundaries of the expected white, cisgender middle class audience of the Victorian age. The movement is notable for its inclusion and encouragement of women, and in portraying and engaging non-conventional beauty and beauties as figures from the Classical World alongside Religious, Mythological and Folklore Heroines into Victorian 'Femme Fatales'.

#8 Jokyo/Genroku Kimono Textile Culture and the new role of the Komin ---  This essay will return back to GKTC (Genroku Kimono Textile Culture ; 1688-1704) and JoKTC (Jokyo K.T.C. 1684-1688) and the new role of the Komin (Artist caste) in GKTC. JoKTC is notable for being the lead up to GKTC, JoKTC being characterised by its transitory nature in comparison to GKTC, which was far more bold in its relations to what Kosode could and should be. Komin entered the picture at this juncture, and I shall elaborate a little more here than in other posts about why that was. GKTC is notable for its elaborate, perhaps gaudy and innovative Kosode design features, whilst JoKTC more so for the enabling factors of the time, as a sort of incubatory GKTC.

#9 Tagasode Byobu - This essay will explore the art motif known in Japanese art as Tagasode Byobu ( Whose sleeves Screen) This motif is a recurring art form which was particularly popular during the Azuchi-Momoyama era ( 1568-1600 ) as a representation of the ways in which Buddhist sensibilities met with the fast changing events of the end of the Sengoku Jidai (1467-1615) and as an extension of the habit of wealthy women from military families came to own and store a large number of Kimono. Prior to this, Kin Byobu ( Golden Screens) for the most part depicted nature like Sesshuu Touyou (1420-1506) after Chinese Cha'an painter Muxi ( c.1210-1269 ) or 'flower-and-bird' scenes like those of Kano Eitoku (1543-1590), rather than humans or human paraphernalia as an extension of the Zen painting school of thought about materialism.

#10 Cultural Acculturation --- The topic of our essay is on the nature of Cultural Exchange in KTC which will be an ongoing mini-series throughout 2022. This covers the 1000CE - 1500 period in Japanese History.

#11 Cultural Appropriation --- The topic of our essay is on the nature of Cultural Appropriation which will be an ongoing mini-series throughout 2022. 

#12 Cultural Acculturation --- The topic of our essay is on the nature of Cultural Acculturation which will be an ongoing mini-series throughout 2022. This covers the Asuka (Hakuho), Nara (Tempyo), and Heian periods (500CE-1000CE) in Japanese History.

#13 Asai Ryoi --- This essay will explore the legacy of Asai Ryoi on KTC. Who was Asai Ryoi you may ask? Only one of the most important writers for the Ukiyo genre. Asai Ryoi ( act. 1661-1691 ) was a prolific Ukiyo-zoshi ( Books of the floating world )  or Kana-zoshi  ( Heimin Japanese Books ) writer. His leading 1661 publication, lambasted and satirized Buddhism and Samurai culture of restraint in favour of the Chonin lifestyle of worldy excess.

#14 Edith Craig --- This is a post regarding the early adoption and promulgation of the Kimono and Japanese aesthetics in the life of the wonderful Edith Craig (1869-1947), daughter of the famous actress Ellen Terry (1847-1928) and Edward William Godwin (1833-1886). Edith was also known as 'Edy'.

#15 European Banyans --- This essay will explore the European garment known as a Banyan, which originated as a European reaction to Kimono in the 17th century, popular until the end of the 18th century. The word Banyan originates from Arabic ( Banyaan), Portuguese (Banian), Tamil ( Vaaniyan ) and Gujarati ( Vaaniyo ) loanwords meaning 'Merchant'. Alternative versions saw the item fitted with buttons and ribbons to attach the two front sides together. The Banyan was worn by all genders and was particularly regarded in its first iterations as a gentlemanly or intellectual garment worn with a cap to cover the lack of a periwig, and later adopted by women and greatly influenced how British womens garments were designed with preference for comfort in removal of panniers whilst maintaining luxurious, modest 18th century fashions (see Robe a la Anglaise).

#16 Miss Universe and Kimonope --- This essay will explore how Beauty Pageants, principally Miss Universe, has engaged with KTC. While there may be real Kimono worn by Japanese and Japanese adjacent contestants in the 'National Costume' category, I will be focusing on the Kimonope worn by contestants. The idea of Kimono as a 'national costume' sparks interesting conversations on what 'national costumes' are, their target audiences, and how we form ideas about these things to begin with.

#17 Onna-E --- Womens pictures refers to the Nara, Heian and early Kamakura ( 710-1333CE ) practice of drawing women in elongated Hand scrolls, which today are regarded as feminine gender coded Art. Some of these narratives depict the lives of women, their extra diaries, or the literature they wrote. The Onna-E style derives from how mostly Heian women represented themselves and others as a performed self in these scrolls, drawing from their lives indoors at their and the imperial abodes. Whilst a limited number of women could read Kanji, they also used their knowledge of Chinese culture to create and inspire their own culture; the first truly Wamono aesthetics; and it was with these preconditions that Onna-E became established in the Japanese art scene alongside Yamato-E and Oshi-E.

#18 A Jamaican, a Monster and Portuguese bar in the Orient --- This essay looks at the Kimonope attire adopted by North American Dancehall artists Shenseea (Chinsea Linda Lee | 1996 - present ) for the video to 'ShenYeng Anthem'. Whilst the aesthetic derives mostly from East Asian, principally Chinese aesthetics, the language used is specifically Japanese, referring to Chinsea Linda Lee as 'ShenYeng Boss', a perpetuation of the Dragon Lady stereotype. The essay mostly charts how this ridiculous Kimonope derides from the North American Anti-Chinese movement and how this intersects with contemporary Orientalism.

#19 The Red Kimonope --- The Red Kimono is a terribly named racist US silent film from 1925. The Longingist film includes a key scene which the production gets its name from where the protagonist drops her Kimonope, meant to symbolize that she had turned away from sin and prostitution, or in other words equating a wearer of the Kimono as a sex worker which stemmed from another American 'tradition'. This dreadful melodrama features the previously yellowface-accepter Priscilla Bonner as the lead protagonist. Throughout her trials and tribulations, she faces many ups and downs, like becoming a white version of the Lotus Blossom stereotype, because WASPs. I will explore the origins of the Lotus concept and the 'Jade' in more detail here as to provide the contextual background of the productions symbolism.

#20 Housewife, Business Girl, Office Lady --- I explore the concept of the arrival of the Business Girl, and the Shufu ( Censored | Housewife ) of the 1930-1970's period of the 20th century.[1] This intersects with how we see Wafuku represented, in a shifting dynamic that had not shifted so many barriers since the 1870s, and even until the 1990s with the intrusion of Euro/Americentric beauty standards being foisted upon the world during these centuries, in the wardrobes of the upwardly mobile single business women of from 1955-1965. These groups came into being in the 1950s with the advent of the eclipse of settler colonialism and patriarchal standards over women's lives internationally. KTC thus developed in response to these changing, testing and trying times (between 1930-1970).

#21 Herman's 'Kimono' --- In this essay I look at another Kimonope, specifically another Miss Universe 'national costume' entry. This particular Kimonope represents the legacy of Macarthism's neo-colonial/systemic racism, and subjugation of Japanese soft-power, a follow on of Orientalist late 19th/early 20th century assumptions and stereotypes of Asian culture and peoples which saw their subjugation in American foreign and domestic policy between 1885-1952. In this entry, we see a clear leaning into the 'Cool Japan' aesthetic by the Kimonope's designer, who is not shockingly not Japanese, but Israeli and therefore represents ideas about what Kimono are to this designer than the genuine article would to other participants of KTC, foreigner or otherwise towards 'Kimono'.

#22 Uno Chiyo --- This essay explores the work of Uno Chiyo (1897-1996) as a Kimono Designer. Uno was a prolific 20th century Japanese writer and designer. As such, Uno was familiar and fluently versed in KTC throughout her life. Uno founded the influential Style which was in circulation in Japan from 1936-1959.[1] Uno was heavily influenced by Western and Genroku fashion, and focused her aesthetic on these two whilst encouraging masculine and secondhand consumer habits in her approach to Kimono as a fashionable and modern pursuit. Uno provides a fascinating glimpse into a time before Kimono were stigmatized and were instead merged with Yofuku to inform Japanese identity and femininity in new and stylish publications and normoactivities.

Social Links

One stop Link shop: https://linktr.ee/Kaguyaschest

https://www.etsy.com/uk/shop/KaguyasChest?ref=seller-platform-mcnav 

https://www.instagram.com/kaguyaschest/ 

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC5APstTPbC9IExwar3ViTZw 

https://www.pinterest.co.uk/LuckyMangaka/hrh-kit-of-the-suke/ 

Monday, May 23, 2022

巴蜀錦 | Bashu Jin | (Ba)Shu (-Jiang) Brocade | Fabrics #14

Apologies this is up on a Monday, I had to do overtime at my day-job this Sunday.

Bashu brocade is a type of brocade which originates from the Sichuan area of modern China. It is known as the 'mother of Chinese brocade' and is known for being an important non material part of Chinese Sericulture, which played a key role in the development of Kinu in Japan.[1][3] It is known in China as a 'national intangible cultural property'.[2] In its heyday, it was a prized Nara textile worn by the upper courts in Japan and has a fuzzy edge to it.[6] Bashu brocade requires complex antiquated hand machinery operated by two weavers known in English as a 'Tower Loom'.[3][4] Due to this complex process, only 6-8cm of Bashu brocade are made in a day.[4]

'[Ba]Shu' Brocade (2010, CC1.0) Gary Todd

Bashu brocade is made by weaving using a Chengdu machine which is made from hundreds of Bamboo rods, whose material successor was the Ming Loom.[1] The background of the Brocade is first interlaced with the pattern woven into the brocade using a series of looms along a wheel or Axle by the upper weaver who pulls on the warp threads making the background, often red, brown or black.[1][3][6] The weft are pulled taut by the lower weaver, and the correct warp strings divided up and a hook is run over them. Silk threads are laid by the planned design, and corresponding silk threads are placed on the hook and pulled through the brocade to be pulled down into place by the lower weaver to make the brocade.[2] The lower weaver must know over 120 stitches to do this Embroidering.[4] The ends of the warp threads are knotted off and the weft threads pulled taut.[2] The Axel also helps to keep the threads taut as the upper weaver pulls them through the loom. When the pattern is complete, it is removed and washed in running water.[3]

Tower Loom Upper Weaver (1991, CC1.0) Gary Todd

Bashu began in China around 3000 years ago. Bashu culture is considered one of 3 of the birthplaces of Chinese culture, particularly Sericulture.[1] Beginning by 221 BCE, the industry of Sericulture for the Shu kingdom was an important facet of Chinese culture.[1] By 220 CE the formation of regulation began to take hold of Bashu sericulture.[3] This formed the beginning of the famed Southern Silk 'Road' routes to countries like Mongolia, India, Persia and Japan (via Ryukyuu) which spanned the Eurasian continent and surrounding archipelagoes.[1][8]

Silk was first produced in Neolithic China (10,000-2000BC), and introduced to Japan by 300 AD [of Hemp and animal fibers].[3][4]

Bashu brocade was then introduced into Japan by 618 CE when it reached a new golden age, becoming worn by people like Emperor Taizong (598CE-649CE).[4] It was a pivotal Chinese export during the Tang dynasty until its collapse in 907 CE and this is reflected in the Japanese imperial courts styles, which may have been worn by the likes of Empress Suiko (554CE-628CE) who wore them, probably more so as a gesture of goodwill after she sent the letter declaring 'Wa' to be their own sovereign country from the great 'Celestial Empire'. If you are to look in the Shosoin Repository for example, you can see the influence of the Chinese bureaucrat Zhang Yanyuan (815-877CE) who introduced the paired animal motif into brocade.[7] Extant examples being Crane and Sika Deer for example.[1] It is said therefore that this has inspired some Nishijin weaves motifs in Japan as 'traditional' motifs.[8]

Between 1000-1800, Bashu brocade remained a traditionally prized craft and was thus unaltered and fluctured in popularity as an export as it was overtaken by other more popular Indian and Persian samite silks overseas. By the late 1800s, Bashu brocade was a highly specialised craft worn only by the rich, and was at risk of becoming a lost art. During this time, it became synonymous with Chinese painting styles and attracted many painters to make designs in Chengdu.[8] By the 20th century, efforts began to be made to save the craft and were exhibited internationally.[6] Over in Japan, the intricate designs whilst not as popular after the introduction of Zen Aesthetics in 1200CE-1650CE, are still used today in Kitsuke and apparel designs like Zori ( Wedged Sandals | 草履 ).[5]

Overall, Bashu or Shu Brocade was the predominant Chinese silk export until 900 CE until Ms.Suiko sent that letter, but was certainly regarded as a form of High and refined culture in Chinese and neighbouring countries from the Golden Age of Chinese culture, the Tang Dynasty (I recommend the Empress of China 2014 Fan Bingbing Drama if you want more context). Whilst having a complicated relation from 607 on, Bashj brocade was worn by court nobles in Japan from this time until the Nara period when Japan begaan making its own Kinu.[4] After this the motifs and styles remained influential on modern Kimono design as part of the 'Shu brocade' motifs of complex ornamental and animal motifs on red and brown backgrounds.[9]

Bibliography

[1] https://artsandculture.google.com/story/shu-brocade-the-earliest-brocade-in-china/hwKC7Tji8PKvJw

[2] Craftsmen of Shujin Brocade | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMy0Ve8pKMg

[3] https://www.chinadiscovery.com/sichuan/chengdu/shu-brocade-embroidery-museum.html

[4] See Fabrics #3

[4] https://www.2021chengdu.com/activity/news/newsDetail?id=11440&lang=en&cid=jd_ms

[5] https://shop.japanobjects.com/products/shu-zori-slippers

[6] https://www.chinatravel.com/culture/chinese-brocade

[7] The Significance of the Central Asian Objects in the Shōsōin for Understanding the International Art Trade in the Seventh and Eighth CenturiesWilliam E. Mierse, March 2017, p.267, Sino Platonic Papers | http://sino-platonic.org/complete/spp267_shosoin.pdf

[8] http://www.csstoday.com/Item/3557.aspx

[9] https://inf.news/en/culture/2e8d83ca5020b771bee089116aee7cd7.html

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Sunday, February 27, 2022

羊毛 | Youmou | Wool | Fabrics #12

Wool has been used in KTC as technically Tsumugi, Kasuri Ikat and Pongee weaves for over 100 years at least and was initially considered to be a luxury fabric in Japan, worn by the military and other elites.[2][5] A lot of made-in-Japan Youmou comes currently from around 20,000+ Suffolk Sheep, with the bulk of Japanese wool being imported from Australia.[2][4][6] The advent of wool in the late 19th century saw the rise of a new sleeker winter silhouette for Kimono, and new Inverness style capes being added into KTC and designs which remain popular today among Kimono revival vintage collectors and designers alike as a fashionable 'Kawaii' accessory, mostly in Merino and Muslin wools.[11]

Young Boys Jinbaori (c1799, CC1.0) Meturoporitan


Wool is made as in most places by taking the yarns from mammals such as sheep, alpacas and llamas and turning the yarns into threads, dependent on the density and fibres of the yarns. These yarns are now processed by mechanical means, but before industry had reached Japan were sorted for dying and weaving. Wool is first sheared, scoured and then put through a carding machine to be spun into yarns via the worsted or woollen systems. Most of the wool we encounter in Kimono is worsted for its dense nature, but some lighter fluffier fabrics use the Woollen production system for wools like Cashmere. These yarns are wrapped around Bobbins and woven into the worsted plain weave or the woollen twill weave. Crabbing and Decating may also occur to tighten the fibers of these weaves so that they do not shrink or loosen. A Wools Crimp describes how heavy it is basically and as British worsted wool is best, is still used in futon making today for its lightweight feel which retains heat.[6][9]

Historically, Broadcloth, Grofgrain and Raxa Wool was first imported by Europeans during the Nanbanjin trade between 1613-1639. It was considered a luxury import item at the time and used as a trim of sorts for elites to make Obi and eyecatching red Jinbaori.[10][11] Raxa also became used as a fire-retardant material worn to put out fires. Worsted Serge was also used to make Kappa ( raincoat capes | 合羽). Raxa became Raseita, and Grofgrain became Gorofukurin during this time. Even Hakama were found made with Grofgrain, often in red or violet and were more costly than silk. Between 1800-1804, the Bakufu negotiated with the Dutch and Chinese to import sheep to make a local Wool industry but with all attempts unfruitful.[11] 

Kabuki actor as a Firefighter (1860, PD) Utagawa Yoshitsuya

Wool was first imported en masse for the production of western military garments after 1850, when local Raseita and Goro Wools were used.[5][10][11] European Wool farming in Japan is first said to have begun in the Meiji Period (1868-1912) with the advent of the push for Westernisation and was based on the British industrial revolution model in Yorkshire mills.[4][6] Wool outfits were first adopted by the Imperial Japanese family to receive the visiting Duke of Edinburgh in 1869, which promoted Westernisation, prominently British and Prussian dress due to the perception that Wafuku was effiminate and Yofuku (Western dress) as masculine. Chirimen-goro, or French Muslin Wool, was introduced in 1872 and was popular as a cheap alternative to Chirimen silks and was used primarily for Juban ( Underrobe | 襦袢).[11] Inoue Shozo introduced worsted production to Japan in 1878 creating the Senjuu Mill based on German manufacturing models.[10] This included the adoption of western military attire, which at the time, used a lot of stiff and hard woollen fabrics and textiles.[4]

Saigo Takamori in Yofuku Worsted Military Uniform (1877, PD) Yoshu Chikanobu

With the 1868 reinstatement of the Emperor the prior sumptuary laws (put in place from 1604-1685), fell away opening the door to bright bold and fantastical designs in the 1870s.[11] Imported wool become a popular alternative for Kimono again beginning in the 1880s, particularly Red shawls for women.[10] Designers like Kimura Otokichi created ways to put popular Yuzen designs (Yuzen-moyo) onto Mosurin, or Hirose Jisuke who designed Yuzen Katagami (Stencils).[11] In 1881, Okajima Chiyozo developed a printing technique to print Japanese designs onto Mosurin which became known as Yuzen Muslins, after our Genroku friend Miyazaki Yuzen (1654-1736) and replaced Silk Crepe Chirimen Muslin.[11] In 1889, Australian wools began to be sourced by the Kanematsu Fusajiro Store to meet this growing demand for Mosurin wools.[11] By 1896 these imported luxury Muslin Wool materials accounted for 40% of the Wool Market and part of daily Japanese KTC.[10] These Yuzen designs and bright dyes also imported from the Occident created a new craze we still feel today.[11]

Seeing as these garments were made from Wool, it replaced the need to layer multiple garments over other Kimono as had previously been done and changed the winter silhouette for a time. Japan Wool Textile Co., Ltd was an early introducer of Wool as part of KTC when it began production in 1896.[1] It was in this time when the importation of Wool was particularly high, with most imports coming from England and Germany in 1898.[5] The suppliers of Wool of at this time came mostly from Western Mills, such as the A W Hainsworth Mill (est.1793), which in 1899 recieved an order for 'Black serge' wool to be delivered to Yokohama. This saw the introduction of new types of overcoats and capes such as the Tombi, Nijuumawashi, and Azumakouto.[5][10] 

Tombi Coat (1903, PD) 衣服改良会, Benichan
Wool Azumakouto cover (1910, PD) Jukichi Inoue

By 1900 department stores such as Takashimaya and Mitsukoshi began to stock Mosurin ( Wool Muslin | モスリン) or thin plain weave worsted muslin wools for purchase. At the time these were often red and overtook cotton muslin in popularity among Children and Young Adults for their Kimono. Worsted was bought from Tokyo, and domestic Goro Mosurin from Osaka & Kobe. By the middle of the decade, Mosurin designs would be readily available at Depato and many aimed at the new market of young women consumers as they were more cheaply priced than silk kimono. Mosurin Kimono specifically were pushed to these Young Bright Things through posters and magazines and at events held annually at the Depato themselves. The Gofukuten ( Big Kimono Stores | 呉服店 ) like Mitsukoshi (三越), Takashimaya (高島屋) and Daimaru (大丸) who would set the trends each year. Taisho Mosurin was big business certainly among teenagers and started the emergence of Miss Haikara-san (Ms.High Collar | はいからさん ) which referred to the 'Smartly' dressed young women who adopted western fashions, and displayed a kinship with the Occidental New Woman phenonmenon.[11] This was the sort of It girl Chic of 1910-1920, with short hair, Hakama, textbooks, western boots, Mosurin western motiffed Kimono and a Bow atop the hair, was the Haikara-san charicature of the New Japan. Motifs included Roses, Chrysanthemums and Sunflowers and all in fast bright and bold synthetic dyes.[11]

Female student in Hakama (c1912, PD) Agesa

Wool worsted began to be associated as an English fabric due to its use in the British suit, and Wool was sold in imitation of the English model at stores like Selfridges, Kendals and Harrods besides the railways of Osacca and Tokio for the established gentleman.[6][10] Working class Japanese citizens may have also first come into contact with Wool when their uniforms and issued blankets were made from Wool for the 1904 invasion of the Dalian Peninsula.[6] The process became even more commonplace when the process of printing on Woolen Muslin became mechanized in 1907 by Inahata Katsutaro in Osaka leading to a domestic boom in Wool Mills for these soft lightweight and cheerful fabrics.[10]

With all of the popularity, demand and reliance on foreign imports of woolen goods, factories and due to this whole WWI thing going on, in 1917, the Agricultural and Farming Ministry declared Japan would begin to become self-sufficient in the production of Wool. This was implemented by the building of the Daidoh Wool Kaisha in 1918.[7] This ended by 1920 however as dense wool demand declined in the domestic Japanese market.[3] The Kanto Earthquake (1923) brought all this domestic Wool producting industry to a halt, until it revitalised by the 1930s.

By 1932, Mosurin peaked at it heights of popularity, as Japan turned away from Western inspired motifs like Art Deco, Expressionism and Modernism and with this came the Society of Kyōto Muslin designers and the Ōsaka Designers Union had recently formed.[11] Depato often held contests to design Yuzen inspired Mosurin Katagami designs, and the art of designing onto soft Worsted Mosurin Wool had become a respectable Nihongo art venture. Something that with the expanding Greater Co Prosperity Sphere had turned into fervent passion for militarism and by 1936, the Wool Industry had returned chiefly active in Nagoya, Aichi and Osaka and Ichinomiya, albeit still reliant on imported resources from at first Australia, but China by this time.[10?] Wool Kimono instead began its militarist phase depicting Childrens Kimono with motifs about Japanese warplanes, military prowess and softpower acts like their 'Benevolence' towards Ethiopia as depicted below. By the 1940s, Japan dominated the global wool industry.[6]

Mussolini in Ethiopia Detail on Mosurin (c1935[2015], CC4.0) Sam Perkins

After the Pacific War, the Japan-Australia Commerce Agreement (1957) saw the reinstatement of Australian resources being used to make Japanese wool textiles. After the resolution of the Anglo-Japanese Commerce Treaty (1962), by 1964 there was also seen in an uptick of Japanese department stores stocking soft Wool fabrics and some Kimono also being made from them. Up until the 1980s, it was still said that many in the know consumers still bought British sourced wools in Japan to make textiles and goods.[6] A great number of these Taisho Yofuku-Wamono and Depato Mosurin Kimono are also greatly credited in more recent literature as the start of 'Kawaii' culture as well, and certainly play a large role in helping to popularise modern and global KTC due to their bright appearance.[11] Furifu most recently issued a series of Wool Capes in their 2020 Autumn/Winter Season Collection for example, showing the enduring popularity of Wool within JKTC Kitsuke.[8]

Bibliography

[1] https://www.woolmark.com/industry/use-wool/wool-processing/japan-wool-textile-company/ 

[2] https://sumono.design/japanese-fabric-bolts/wool-kasuri-ikat-woven-full-bolt-japanese-fabric

[3] https://the-japan-news.com/news/article/0007887290

[4] http://www.fragmentsmag.com/en/2014/06/ami-tsumuli-4/ 

[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_clothing_during_the_Meiji_period 

[6] Britain & Japan : biographical portraits Vol X, Hugh Cortazzi, 2016, pp.481-487

[7] https://www.daidoh-limited.com/english/company/history.html 

[8] https://furifu.com/en/news/en-items/2199/ 

[9] https://www.masterclass.com/articles/guide-to-wool-fabric#9-different-types-of-wool 

[10] The Dying Case of the Kimono:The Influence of Changing Fashions on the Development of the Japanese Woolen Industry, Keiichirō Nakagawa, Henry Rosovsky, 1963, Vol.37, No.2, pp.59-80, The Business History Review | Available online at https://www.jstor.org/stable/3112093, Accessed 26/02/2022

[11] Woolen Cloths and the Boom of Fancy Kimono: Worsted Muslin and the Development of 'Kawaii' Designs in Japan from Fashion Identity and Power in Modern Asia, Sugimoto Seiko, 2018, Chapter 11, pp.259-284

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Sunday, July 25, 2021

通り着物 | Dori-Style or 21st century Kimono Fashion | 2008-2018 | Essay #5

This post will be covering the Dori-Kimono style. Something which I just made up because in going over notes for the first 20 years of 21st century section of Kimono history, I noticed a lack of a clear catchall term for what was happening in Japan at the time, at least in English descriptions of the time. I use the term Dori as I do not want to coin an unrelated term to the topic, but I also am reticent to claim all of Street style as 'Tori' either, whilst a large number of streets upon which the subculture originates in all use the suffix 'dori' (the bottom of Takeshita-dori for example), thence Dori-style.

Dori-style (2016) Tokyofashion.com

In my resources page I list Dori-style as: 

A 2010's style deriving from the Kimono-hime subculture, wearers often wear vintage Kimono from 1920-2000, varied vintage and modern fashion accessories, bright colours and takes its inspiration from 1990's-2010s Japanese fashion from magazines like Kimono-Hime and Fruits and streetwear, frequently borrows from Japanese street fashion subcultures found like Lolita.[1]

In the great origin stories of this I shall begin in the 1960s to give some further context. After WWII the intersection of the West and Japan mirrored that of the 1860's, with a majority of Western influence and exertion being Statesian. With the reign of the American shogunate coming to an end in 1951 after he was fired, his legacy as Supreme Commander loomed large over the then wartime casualties such as fashion and architecture which unlike food was not a high priority item of the onion lifestyle. As such Kimono saw a rapid decline in their popularity and fell to the wayside in favour of western fashions, not as some sources may claim an unprecedented feat, as the Japanese upper class had been doing away with Kimono for a time since the 1880's as a part of adopting Westernisation. A practice which by 1900 had certainly trickled into the new middle and working classes with the adoption of smaller items of clothing such as high-collared shirts, pocket watches and Chelsea boots was able to mimic this new influential dress code.

Onion lifestyle gave way later on to the thrift lifestyle, it was said [that] Tokyo changed more from 1950-1960, than America. [...] The humiliation of defeat coupled with the notion that once Japan must 'get with the times' and take the 'American way', known by any other name as a colonial mentality, relegated the Kimono over to the LDP[...].[2]

The 'thrift lifestyle' I refer to here was the mindset which Japanese people rather like Londoners, had to follow between 1947-1959. A large amount of infrastructure, production systems and chains had been broken in the run up to the 1960s in Honshu, principally by American firebombing campaigns which had begun in February 1945 in an effort to destroy wartime ammunition supply and as a deterrent to the Japanese army who had vowed to continue a now almost lost war.[3] This prompted a great series of rationing during wartime, and from 1946 on, the dismantling and eventual reinstatement of a limited number of Japan Inc's heavy industry companies. 

A number of these included manufacturing and chemical companies which were mostly targeted for their involvement in the wars by SCAP. By 1960, with the rise of Communism in neighbouring countries, American Foreign policy towards Japan shifted in favour of resurrecting the country as it had encouraged the Federal Western Republic of Germany Bloc to do so with the Marshall Plan.[4] Japan suddenly became a vital arm of American Defense Policy, although the only real change from 1952 to the present in defending Statesian high-flying foreign defence policy was the capacity of the US to establish controversial Military bases on Guam, Okinawa and in neighbouring South Korea. The US of course drew from its previous financial vulture model and made money from the interest collected on war loans. 

The US apparently though did not factor in the previous century, a century which as anyone with any knowledge of Meiji Japan knows, is the age which saw the complete overhaul of Japan as a nation from an Asian small to great power between 1854 and 1902 with the arrival of Perry's black ships and the ratification of the Anglo Japanese Alliance which saw the Japanese upheld as the only PoC member at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, and promptly after forgetting to do their homework, let Japan be. Japan on the other hand had already begun hiring independent American financial advisors on the matter of how to restructure Japan Inc. This was successfully carried and is today referred to as the Japanese Economic miracle which lasted from approximately 1960-1980, leading to  the Bubble economy due to Japanese domestic saving tactics from 1980-1989. Instead the United States promptly patted itself on the back, declared it all MacArthurs legacy and take credit for Japanese labour, the Constitution and 'Modernisation' to this day.

Kimono Fashions (1956) 投稿者によるスキャン

Back to Japan though, whilst the wearing of Kimono from 1945-1980 saw a marked decline in domestic Japanese markets due to the need to promote once again Westernisation, the thrift lifestyle did include fashion as you see above. Whilst Kimono eventually transitioned over the years to form a 'traditional' form of dress; 1950-1959 being still commonly seen, 1960-1979 worn by older or traditional people, 1980-1989 worn increasingly as a sign of wealth and of national pride; by the 1990s the Kimono was certainly not a commonly worn garment by many Japanese people.

It is this context information between 1980-1999 which provides us with the scene set for how Kimono began to worn increasingly by younger people, eventually forming the revivalist historical subculture or what I call 'Dori-style'. By the 1980-1999 date, I mean that in this period, the Kimono was increasingly taken up again as a sign of wealth, particularly associated with Ginza who could afford to buy $10,000 artisan kimono every other week, and increasingly as a sign of national pride. Pride became a factor as the country was seen to be back on its feet again with the reinvigoration of the Japanese economy, heralded by the 1964 Olympics and Japan's pride of place in  the production and manufacturing of Electronics in the 1980s. As such, younger middle class people with more leisure time began to increasingly in an effort to take pride in their national heritage and traditions began taking up traditional hobbies, such as wearing and making Kimono or related items in the textile industry. 

As such by the 1990s, an increasingly larger number of young women and some men had begun to regularly wear Kimono again, although only in a small number. This 1990s revivalist subculture began to form meetings, publish material on antique Kimono and to my understanding began to increasingly wear the Kimono out and about, encouarging others to do so themselves. This was bolstered, not hindered by the 1990 Bubble crash, as many derelict Kimono, abandoned due to superstitions about being haunted by their previous owners I was once told (a grapevine rumour though if anything), began to appear on the secondhand market for incredibly cheap prices. This allowed antique Kimono collections to be built on the cheap, which of course allowed revivalist Kimono groups to form more easily with gretaer access to the products themselves which lead inevitably to more books and groups and with the introduction of the WWW in 1991 prompted a great revival in particularly Meisen or Taisho era Kimono wearing.

The Archetypal Kimono-Hime style (2009) Flickr/Kimono-Hime
Kimono-Hime Style (2019) Tokyofashion.com

It it this historical revivalist subculture which backdrops the 2000's background for Dori Culture. I swear I will get there eventually, stick with me. In the early 2000's fanzines (fan magazines) or Mooks began to be published within this subculture.[5] The most prominent of these that I know of would be the Kimono Hime series which began publishing in 2003. This glossy Mook with its penchant for pouting and antiques spawned the Kimono-Hime subculture, at its height from 2004 - 2010 I would say. Kimono-Hime was the first big Kimono subculture to include blogging and vlogging, with platforms like Tumblr, our lovely Blogger, LiveJournal, Wordpress and I suspect Geocities will have had a few, as well as Livedoor and Mircosoft Excite in Japan.[6]

For a 2005 Kimono-Hime vlog, see:- http://kimonoandkitsuke.blogspot.com/2005/06/

The Kimono-Hime subculture of blogging, and copying the inspiration of Mooks, the aesthetic of brands like Kimono-Hime, Mamechiyo and Tokyo 135 all promoted a glossy subculture, similar to how Visual Kei and Gothic Lolita have spread around the world via the appreciation of either aesthetics and their cultural activities and communities.

This progressed further into the 2010's style which I call Dori-style. Another change had taken place in Japan since this time, with came about with the evolution of internet culture in Japan and social media. In Japan, the combination of Yahoo Auctions (most likely), greater number of physical stores setting up their online or e-commerce platforms, the proliferation of Mooks and overall increase in those interested in fashion who blogged, vlogged or wrote online, saw a rise in the number of resources and fashion subcultures. This occurred abroad with the popularity of Ebay stores, Instagram, Youtube, Facebook & Twitter meetup events and the popularity of Street Photography, all of these merged to form what we may now call Dori-style which emerged around 2008 - 2018 by my estimates.[7] 

I say 2008 - 2015 because the overall style of dress changed to a more individualistic style by this time and branched off due to the style seemingly becoming blase among the public and groups and individuals involved. Styling altered so that a less modest and more international style emerged and new shops began to open in Japan to shift to this demand, away from the frilly, traditional and antique and into a more layered and punk DIY aesthetic of Dori.

Dori-style instead was the new aesthetic which drew its style influence and aspiration from Street photography in Japan rather than simply from books which is the major distinction between the two aesthetics of Dori and Hime styles. Hime styles for instance are exemplified by their pleated bottoms taken from Mamechiyo, pouty expressions and rigid Kitsuke, following the trend of revivalist historical and antique styles promoted by the resurgence in the 1990s of Japanese domestic subcultures. Whereas Dori often is exemplified by its elaborate and innovative styling such as ornate non-traditional Musubi knots and Haori ties, incorporating elements from other cultures including motifs and western clothing items such as turtle neck jumpers to replace Eri, as well as often hand-made elements such as Obidome. Dori style often plays with hemlines and modesty more than the conservative and modest styles of Hime and is more like the rebellious sibling of the two, playing around more with silhouettes, very bold colours (e.g.- neon) and DIY Kitsuke. Dori fashion often could be find in magazines like Fruits and online at Tkyofashion.com, both of whom document/ed Japanese street photography and youth fashion.

In context therefore, Dori-style is the current global aspect of JKTC, with a complex mix of Western and Eastern fashion at the forefront. Kimono in this context are derivatives of a time where print publication was replaced by digital platforms and formats, moving from away from a consumer based in Japan towards global groups and younger demographics of people involved in fashion. Particularly, it is a reflection of how Japanese audiences have responded to the history of Kimono and its role in the modern day, not as a item of historical intrigue, but once again as fashion in its own right. Dori is defined by its break away point from the Hime subculture and the technological constraints both subcultures were afforded in their times. In essence though Dori-style is part of a wider acceptance and wearing of Kimono once more as a fashionable item and as a transitive style.

Essay #6 will be on the aforementioned tea-gown and loungewear issue in Western KTC.


Bibliography

[1] https://kaguyaschest.blogspot.com/search/label/ResourcePage

[2] https://kaguyaschest.blogspot.com/2021/05/the-legacy-of-macarthur-dynasty-on-ktc.html 

[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_raids_on_Japan 

[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marshall_Plan

[5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mook_(publishing)

[6] https://themeisle.com/blog/history-of-blogging/

[7] https://tokyofashion.com/page/10/?s=kimono


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