SUKUNA WEARS A STRAIGHT-LINE-CUT KIMONO

  • nobility began to wear clothing that covered their hands and feet
  • white is a color of purity and represents truth, humility, and mourning
  • black is associated with formality as well as mourning
  • generally worn by priests, brides, and corpses (or those soon to be corpses)

KIMONO

jp. "something to wear" (general term for all kinds of traditional clothing that has existed from the Heian era)
  • FORMAL
  • UNDERCLOTHES
  • THICK HARD BELT
  • SHOES (zori) + SOCKS (tabi)
SILK is the highest quality.

Kimono Ranking

FIRST DRESS
  1. Shiro-muku, Iro-uchikake (bride)
  2. Kuro-tomesode (married woman, black color)
  3. Hon-furisode (unmarried woman, coming of age)
  4. Mofuku (funerals)
SEMI-FORMAL
  1. Iro-tomesode (married woman, other color)
  2. Homon-gi (participants of wedding and tea ceremonies)
  3. Tsukesage (parents joining childrens' entrance and graduation ceremonies)
  4. Iro-muji (same use as tsukesage without any designs)
  5. Edo-komon (small patterns)
NEAT
  1. Komon (casual)
  2. Tsukesage-komon (certain pattern design)
EVERYDAY CLOTHES
  1. Tsumugi, Momen (KYOUKA IZUMI)
  2. Yukata

YUKATA

originally a bath robe (onsen) and became casual summer wear in the Edo period
  • INFORMAL
  • REGULAR CLOTHES / NONE
  • MEDIUM SOFT BELT
  • SHOES (geta) ONLY
COTTON mostly.