GREAT novelty knot for this obi shaped like a cute bat. The soft fabric must flutter a bit when you walk, making the bat wings move (LOVE!).
To shape this knot, OP used rubber bands and a sanjûihimo (3 straps elastic belt, Billy Matsunaga has a tutorial on sewing the 4 straps-variation + see how it’s used here).
This features the susoyoke I've been sewing for probably over 50 hours, a vintage ro kimono, antique ro obi, and some other items.
The outfit was first worn some years ago, with Eisen-style makeup. Red lipstick and bright green-yellow eyeshadow imitated kyoubeni (or sasabeni), a lip colour so expensive and so unique, it was eventually subjected to sumptuary laws. This is how kyoubeni looks when worn in several layers.
I was thinking of the story of Orochi, a Great Serpent, one of the legends of the original gods. Orochi had eight heads with brilliant red eyes, and some say eight tails as well. The Great Serpent required sacrifices from those of the Earth, of course of their most precious and beloved- the princesses of the land. An earthly deity and his wife had eight daughters originally, but when Susan-o-o came, there was only one left: Kushinada-hime. 'Hime' is 'princess.'
Susan-o-o is the younger brother of the Sun Goddess, Ameterasu. He would save Kushinada-hime in exchange for the promise of marrying her. Of course, the father accepted. Susan-o-o transformed Kushinada into a comb and developed a plan to slay Orochi. When Orochi was tricked into drunkenness and sleep, Susan-o-o cut him to pieces. In a tail, he finds the legendary sword, Kusanagi no Tsurugi, the "Grass-Cutting Sword."
Here, you see the motifs of a dragon and uroko, scales, with the bright red of Orochi's eyes and the tall pampass grass. The comb is antique bekko from Meiji era; the kanzashi is also an antique in the jade colour appropriate for hot weather and serpents. The shoes are black lacquer geta with a fine puckered texture hanao, similar to shibori. They match the obiage and other white elements.
The sellers of these things have been many, and all have been acquired for over a decade. I'm sure there are plenty of kanzashi to find on Etsy, though. I think the seller of the dragon obi was Ichiroya, which is long gone.
Most of the komono are self-made from cotton. The obimakura and ita are modern from Chirimen Bunny.
The juban is the same white synthetic ro juban I use often. I have very few juban. I was thinking maybe I should use a hemp haneri here but I thought it was out of place with a silk komon and obi.
The komon is from later Showa era. It has a few subtle stains but they are dark brown-black on grey-black fabric, so they are easy to hide. I'm fairly certain it feels like a smooth, ultralight silk. Off-white susuki, pampass grass, is an August motif.
Early August is considered the height of Summer; after the first week it will be Autumn. It is still supremely HOT. Whereas the very last week of Summer will be shown in white, moegi (a bright green,) pale pink, and orange, Autumn will be marked by deep blues, black, dark purples, etc. It is the hottest so the point here is to create a feeling of shade and coolness.
August, by the way, is also when the traditional Ghost Month (7th Month) happens. Today, it is held in July. In August, when the veil between living and dead is thin and the fabrics are also thinnest, there was once a trend to wear a juban or middle-garments of a different colour or pattern which would show through the kosode. Sadly, today they are mostly white, off-white, another white, palest yellow that is nearly white, or pale pink. ::siiiiighhhh::
If you wonder why so many ro and ra obi are available in the same 3-5 colours, that is because the palette of what is typically worn and appropriate for Autumn is very small. The ro stage of Autumn is very small and not many people wear kimono regularly enough to bother so... take what you can get, I suppose. Shades of pale tan, khaki, and palest blue are considered most beautiful. Later in the season you might find oranges and deep reds these days if the season turns cool earlier.
This antique dragon obi is super soft but strong silk (although I try not to pull it very tightly or use it in musubi that require a lot of folding or binding.) Original seller had estimated it from late Meiji or early Taisho. The main pattern is segaiha, ocean waves. 青海波 literally means "blue ocean waves," so even though the obi is more beige, it is understood that this is a cooling motif. The dragons are of the ocean. The weave has different threads of the same shade and it shines as you walk. The musubi here is yanagi-musubi and meant to imitate a waterfall. A waterfall from grassy mountains, into the waters of the ocean. "Orochi" may be from words referring to mountain peaks, water spirits or dragons, and gods; indeed, Orochi lives in mountains near Hikawa (Hi River.)
Although a thin marujime would be better, this very old, weathered tea-green obijime I think is a nod to this very ancient story and is a perfect colour. The diagonal orientation is a reference to the style fashionable 100 years ago, when this obi was made. The obiage has waves and swirling water patterns, which you can see a hint of on the left side. The obiage is not my favourite since it is synthetic but it is easy to wash, I suppose.
This fan has been seen before! August-appropriate darker 'wood' with kikyo and susuki patterns.
The shoes are a vintage black lacquered geta with a bubbly, rough weave which gives the impression of shibori. I have a bag which uses a similar fabric. The red in them is meant to be quite close to the red in the obiage.
You can probably understand why this is such a favourite and why it was such a goal to make a susoyoke like this.
Kimono
Wrist to wrist: 47"
Sleeve length: 18"
Body width: 22.5"
Neck to hem: 60.75"
Obi:
Ro obi, not pre-sewn into Nagoya shape
Length x width: 149.25" x 11.75"
No pattern from 14.25" - 43"
These pics are all from my senior thesis defense/gallery opening back in 2011, on the topic of Japanese tea ceremony. I can't currently get better pics of the pieces unfortunately, because all of it is in storage.
★ KITSUKE 着付け --- The manner of dressing, especially the proper wearing of a kimono. It is also used to mean "dressing neatly and nicely". To some degree, your kitsuke also involves the artistic sensibilities you exercise when matching up a given Kimono with a given Obi. And etc etc.
★ OHASHORI おはしょり --- The folded excess of Kimono fabric that "hangs" under the OBI (waist band) after raising the bottom of the kimono to properly graze the floor.
Circa 1890-95 large albumen print. Negative No. 268 by an unknown photographer.
Oh look, I’m back on my nonsense of putting queer or queer-coded female characters in wafuku! If you’re not sure what I mean, feel free to check out my old Sailor Uranus/Sailor Neptune or Steven Universe kimono fanart…
Keith and I recently watched Rock is a Lady’s Modesty (ロックは淑女レディの嗜みでして, Rokku wa Redi no Tashinami deshite), which is a huge mouthful and is usually referred to as simply Rock…