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  2. Japanese street fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_street_fashion

    Japanese street fashion refers to a number of styles of contemporary modern clothing in Japan.Created from a mix of both local and foreign fashion brands, Japanese street fashions tend to have their own distinctive style, with some considered to be extreme and imaginative, with similarities to the haute couture styles seen on European catwalks.

  3. The best street style from Tokyo Fashion Week - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-street-style-tokyo-fashion...

    Tokyo Fashion Week concluded perhaps its most successful edition since the Covid-19 pandemic, with more international guests and buyers returning to Japan’s capital for the Fall-Winter 2024 edition.

  4. Street style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Street_style

    Japan is gradually becoming a country that is a genuine force in the field of fashion. Today's Japanese fashion contributes both to the aesthetics of fashion as well as to how business is made in this industry. Japanese street fashion sustains multiple simultaneous highly diverse fashion movements at any given time. It does not come from the ...

  5. Ganguro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ganguro

    Ganguro (ガングロ) is an alternative fashion trend among young Japanese women which peaked in popularity around the year 2000 and evolved from gyaru.. The Shibuya and Ikebukuro districts of Tokyo were the centres of ganguro fashion; it was started by rebellious youth who contradicted the traditional Japanese concept of beauty; pale skin, dark hair and neutral makeup tones.

  6. Fruits (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruits_(magazine)

    Fruits (stylized as FRUiTS) was a Japanese monthly street fashion magazine founded in 1997 by photographer Shoichi Aoki.Though Fruits covered styles found throughout Tokyo, it is associated most closely with the fashion subcultures found in Tokyo's Harajuku district.

  7. Gyaru - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyaru

    A documentary has been made on YouTube, about three different Japanese street fashion styles and three participants and the negative reactions they received. [102] Even so, in 2011, these western or gaijin gyaru held their first event, the Gaijin Gyaru Awards which was created by an English gaijin gyaru with the online username Lhouraii Li.