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  2. Shichi-Go-San - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shichi-Go-San

    Shichi-Go-San (七五三, lit. 'seven-five-three') is a traditional Japanese rite of passage and festival day for three- and seven-year-old girls, five-year-old and sometimes three-year-old boys, held annually on November 15 to celebrate the growth and well-being of young children. As it is not a national holiday, it is generally observed on ...

  3. Chonmage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chonmage

    Chonmage. A 19th-century samurai with a chonmage. The chonmage (丁髷) is a type of traditional Japanese topknot haircut worn by men. It is most commonly associated with the Edo period (1603–1868) and samurai, and in recent times with sumo wrestlers. It was originally a method of using hair to hold a samurai kabuto helmet steady atop the ...

  4. Wakashū - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wakashū

    Woodblock print by Ishikawa Toyonobu, c. 1740, showing two actors portraying a wakashū (left) and an adult man (right). Note the difference in hairstyle. Wakashū (若衆, lit. ' young person ', although never used for girls) is a historical Japanese term indicating an adolescent boy, used particularly during the Edo period (1603–1867).

  5. School uniforms in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_uniforms_in_Japan

    Japanese school uniforms have been around for 150 years. Originally students just wore standard everyday clothes to school; kimono for female students, with hakama for male students. During the Meiji period, students began to wear uniforms modelled after Western dress. [2] Shimoda Utako in hakama; she was an advocate for dress reform. [3]

  6. Kanzashi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kanzashi

    A modern tsumami kanzashi set of the type worn by maiko (apprentice geisha) for the month of January. Kanzashi (簪) are hair ornaments used in traditional Japanese hairstyles. The term kanzashi refers to a wide variety of accessories, including long, rigid hairpins, barrettes, fabric flowers and fabric hair ties.

  7. Japanese clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_clothing

    Photograph of a man and woman wearing traditional clothing, taken in Osaka, Japan. There are typically two types of clothing worn in Japan: traditional clothing known as Japanese clothing (和服, wafuku), including the national dress of Japan, the kimono, and Western clothing (洋服, yōfuku), which encompasses all else not recognised as either national dress or the dress of another country.

  8. Chapatsu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chapatsu

    An example of the chapatsu (Japanese boy). Chapatsu (茶髪/ちゃぱつ), literally " brown hair " in the Japanese language, [1] is a style of bleaching (and occasionally dyeing) hair, found among Japanese teens. The style was once banned at Japanese schools and became a widespread topic of the civic right to self-expression, but discussion of ...

  9. Court uniform and dress in the Empire of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Court_uniform_and_dress_in...

    The first of these edicts also designated white tie dress as the court dress of choice for those not entitled to any particular court uniform, such as private citizens. The uniforms for members of the Imperial Family were first decided by an edict of the Dajō-kan on February 22, 1873, and then updated in 1876 and 1911.