kimono
A kimono (着物) is a type of traditional Japanese clothing. It consists of a long, wide-sleeved robe, closed at the front forming a "y" shape. It is held closed with a wide belt-like sash called an obi. The sleeves can be tied back with tasuki.
Kimonos are often worn with other traditional accessories, such as zouri (traditional wooden sandals), tabi (split-toe socks), and kanzashi (traditional hair ornaments). A kinchaku (small cloth drawstring bag) is often carried while wearing a kimono.
Correct examples
Traditional Kimono
- >>0: sample of yukata and kimono
- >>0: normal kimono
- >> tying tasuki and hakama
- >> bridal kimono (uchikake)
- >> shiromuku with wataboushi
Nontraditional Kimono
Incorrect examples
- >> Yae Miko's outfit does not resemble a kimono in any way; simply being a Japanese-styled clothing does not count
Related tags
Components
2nd Components
Types
- Funeral kimono (a black kimono worn at funerals)
- Furisode (an unmarried women's kimono with floor-length sleeves)
- Layered kimono (an intricate Heian-era kimono)
- Kimono skirt (a short kimono with a skirt)
- Right-over-left kimono (a kimono with its right side folded over its left side, used for the dead)
- Dougi (A Uniform for Martial Arts training)
- Karate gi (a White short kimono with normal pants and belt worn for combat sports, like Karate and Judo.)
- Shiroshouzoku (a funeral kimono for the deceased)
- Short kimono (a knee-length kimono)
- Uchikake (a wedding kimono)
- Shiromuku (a pure-white wedding kimono)
- Hiki furisode (a formal furisode for bridesmaids)
- Yukata (a light summer kimono)
- Short yukata (a knee-length yukata)
- Bath yukata (a yukata for bath or shower)
Colors
S - Z
Styles
- Checkered kimono
- Fur-trimmed kimono
- Frilled kimono
- Lace-trimmed kimono
- Polka dot kimono
- Print kimono
- Sleeveless kimono
- Striped kimono
Actions
See also
External links
Aliases: none