kimono and obi are suprisingly easy to get out of. just hafta know where to pull... and she would have help this is not the final dressing for the wedding she will be changing clothes at least once more. hairstyles too...
I have wore Kimono and Yukatas several times, and breathing has never been harder. They are definitely heavy compared to any other type of clothes, and it made my walking stride shorter, but breathing was fine.
@@dailyllamagirl2448 Haha no, I am not! I have studied much on the geisha culture, though, and know of many. I do practice what is called 日本髪 Nihongami (Japanese traditional hairstyle) on occasion, though, as well as collecting and wearing kimono. :)
AyilanaEien hi! Thank you so much for replying, and you can do the hairstyle? Wow, you must have a lot of patience:) if I had to wear a kimono I’d probably need help, I find this culture just so eloquent! 😊
@@choux8372 nahh not really... they also can use normal toilet just need to know how to pull the lower part of kimono carefully but I do believe that before dressup, they already told to use the toilet before they start to dressup the bride because dressup can take hours include hairstyle
白無垢の場合、帯の折り目は上の方何だ! 意味がありますか? Why is it that when wearing a bridal ensemble the fold of the obi is on the upper side of the body while it is always placed close to the hips for aby other kind of Kimono? Is there a reason for that ?
olfursson kyllian The hair dresser is mentioning something as a vulgar view, according to which this is related to the virginity of the bride. She is saying you cannot put the hand in the obi from above. How is it that this related to the virginity? I don't know. Another explanation she provides is that there are difference in styles for tying the obi between between different areas in Japan. Anyway, she says she neither knows the reason for sure.
***** This is really interesting, I suspected there was some sort of religious reason but i didn't know why, i thought this had to do with the fact that she couldn't hide anything inside her Obi like other women do sometimes . I couldn't hear at all what the dresser was saying, the sound is not working for me . Thank you very much for your answer, are you Japanese ? Your English is terrific .
I have a question. Is there a tradition to wearing a white wedding dress in Japan? Was that a western concept brought over? I thought I read somewhere that white was a symbol of death in Japan.
I am a man desperately wanting to wear a furisode kimono but I had it set in my mind that if i did i would horribly offend your culture... but lovely kimono hands down the most beautiful I have ever seen.