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Big John (Japanese: ビッグジョン) is a denim and casual clothing manufacturer founded by Kotaro Ozaki (尾崎小太郎) in Kurashiki, Okayama Prefecture. [1] Originally named Maruo Hifuku (マルオ被服), [ 2 ] it was the first company in Japan to manufacture jeans domestically, and so has been called "the godfather of Japanese denim ...
Visvim is a Japanese menswear brand founded by Hiroki Nakamura in 2000. The brand is headquartered in Tokyo, Japan, and has stores in Japan and the US, and is sold internationally at luxury department stores and boutiques including Bergdorf Goodman in New York and Dover Street Market in London.
Pages in category "Clothing retailers of Japan" The following 20 pages are in this category, out of 20 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. ABC-Mart;
Ebisu is the name of the Japanese folk god of money who is usually portrayed with a fishing rod. In the early 1990s Yamane introduced a tailoring line, followed by fishing and golf lines. In 1999, he introduced a ladies fashion line called Evisu Donna to complete the development of Evisu as a full-fashion range going far beyond a jeans brand.
A Beams store in Shinjuku. Beams department stores carry products such as interior goods, furniture, galleries, clothing, shoes, and accessories. Beams clothing department offers shoes, bags, accessories, men's and women's casual, as well as custom tailored pieces. Beams logo and artwork are seen as abstract and have a cartoonish look. [3]
A second store opened in 1988 in the Sun Arcade in Tsim Sha Tsui, but it closed in 1995. Mitsukoshi closed its original Causeway Bay store on 17 September 2006, due to the redevelopment of Hennessy Centre. [12] South Korea: In 1930, Mitsukoshi opened a department store (京城三越) in downtown Keijō (today Seoul). [13]
This category describes modern Japanese fashion. Traditional and historic Japanese clothing should be categorised under Japanese clothing. Subcategories.
Rei Kawakubo was born on 11 October 1942 in Tokyo. [2] Her early life in Japan was summarized by Judith Thurman in a New Yorker article from 2005 stating: "She was the oldest of her parents' three children and their only daughter...