Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - I traveled to Japan during May Day and wanted to experience kimono in Kyoto. Is there anything good?

I traveled to Japan during May Day and wanted to experience kimono in Kyoto. Is there anything good?

I recommend you to go to Yingjing kimono shop to have a look at Guanwei. There are many kinds of kimonos in it, and the guest film has a good effect on the upper body. The last time I went with my best friend was Sakurai, where the traffic was convenient and the store had a unique cultural atmosphere in Japan.

Kimono (object-きもの, kimono)? , is the national costume of Japan. ? Before the Edo era, it was called Five Blessingg, and the words came out: ancient story, Japanese record, a dream from a window. Before kimono was called, Japanese clothing was called "wearing things", while in ancient Japan, Wufu was a kind of "wearing things". Kimono can be divided into public property and military property. The so-called kimono today is actually ancient small sleeve. Small sleeve's externalization began in Muromachi era? The white sleeves of nobles gradually became the clothes of ordinary people. ? "Things to wear" include not only "Wu clothes", but also shoulder clothes, hunting clothes in peacetime, etc. These are not from Wu clothes, but from local traditional costumes. Twelve orders were improved from Shang Tang clothes in Nara era, and then changed and innovated.

The origin of kimono can be traced back to the 3rd century. In the Nara era, Japanese envoys came to China and received a large number of dazzling robes. The following year, Japan imitated the costumes of the Sui and Tang Dynasties, and in the Muromachi era, kimono was improved on the basis of inheriting the costumes of the Tang Dynasty, while kimono pockets were created under the influence of Christian missionaries wearing robes and belts? .

Japanese people vividly show their feelings about art in kimono. ? In Japan, when attending crown ceremonies (adult ceremonies), weddings, funerals, sacrificial ceremonies, kendo, archery, chess, tea ceremony, flower path, graduation ceremony, banquets, elegant music, cultural performances and traditional festivals, Japanese people will wear dignified kimonos. ? The clothing culture and etiquette of kimono are called Taoism. Kimono bears nearly 30 important intangible cultural heritages of dyeing and weaving techniques in Japan, as well as more than 50 traditional handicrafts designated by the Minister of Economy, Trade and Industry of Japan. The makers of kimono are Yue Hou Bo Shang, Xiao Qian Gu Su and Yuuki Tsumugi. . It is also included in the world intangible cultural heritage.