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  2. Jūnihitoe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jūnihitoe

    The jūnihitoe was composed of a number of kimono-like robes, layered on top of each other, with the outer robes cut both larger and thinner to reveal the layered garments underneath.

  3. Kimono - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kimono

    ' white pure-innocence ') are pure-white wedding kimono worn by brides for a traditional Japanese Shinto wedding ceremony. Comparable to an uchikake and sometimes described as a white uchikake , the shiromuku is worn for the part of the wedding ceremony, symbolising the purity of the bride coming into the marriage.

  4. Shinto wedding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shinto_wedding

    Japanese formal wedding kimono shiromuku A bride at a Shinto wedding shows her wig and tsuno-kakushi headdress. Brides may also wear one of two styles of headdress. The tsunokakushi ( 角隠し , lit. "horn-hiding") headdress, made from a rectangular piece of cloth, often white silk, which covers the high topknot of the bunkin takashimada ...

  5. Japanese clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_clothing

    Today, the vast majority of people in Japan wear Western clothing in the everyday, and are most likely to wear kimono either to formal occasions such as wedding ceremonies and funerals, or to summer events, where the standard kimono is the easy-to-wear, single-layer cotton yukata.

  6. List of items traditionally worn in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_items...

    A traditional Japanese case for holding small objects, suspended from the obi worn around the waist when wearing kimono. They are often highly decorated, in a variety of materials and techniques, often using lacquer .

  7. Marriage in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marriage_in_Japan

    Japanese brides wear a kimono, which is either a shiromuku (白無垢, "pure white dress"), iro uchikake (色打掛, "colorful outer robe"), or kurobiki furisode (黒引き振袖), the black and patterned kimono once worn at weddings of the nobility during the Edo period (1603–1868), with either an open white watabōshi or a 角隠し ...