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  2. Japanese street fashion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Japanese_street_fashion

    Comme des Garçons garments on display at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Although Japanese street fashion is known for its mix-match of different styles and genres, and there is no single sought-after brand that can consistently appeal to all fashion groups, the huge demand created by the fashion-conscious population is fed and supported by Japan's vibrant fashion industry.

  3. Fruits (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fruits_(magazine)

    Fruits (stylized as FRUiTS) was a Japanese monthly street fashion magazine founded in 1997 by photographer Shoichi Aoki.Though Fruits covered styles found throughout Tokyo, it is associated most closely with the fashion subcultures found in Tokyo's Harajuku district.

  4. Harajuku - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harajuku

    Harajuku is known internationally as a center of Japanese youth culture and fashion. [2] Shopping and dining options include many small, youth-oriented, independent boutiques and cafés, but the neighborhood also attracts many larger international chain stores with high-end luxury merchandisers extensively represented along Omotesando.

  5. Cat Street, Tokyo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat_Street,_Tokyo

    The street at night. Cat Street (キャットストリート, Kyattosutorīto) is an approximately half-mile street in Tokyo, Japan. The street meanders within Harajuku and Shibuya. [1] According to Time Out Tokyo, "Cat Street is the spiritual home of Tokyo’s vibrant street fashion culture. While the strip has been steadily heading upmarket ...

  6. Harajuku Girls - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harajuku_Girls

    In an interview in the January/February 2006 edition of Blender magazine, Cho called Stefani's Harajuku Girls a minstrel show that reinforces ethnic stereotypes of Asian women. [11] Writer Mihi Ahn of Salon.com said of Stefani's Harajuku Girls: "Stefani has taken the idea of Japanese street fashion and turned these women into modern-day geisha ...

  7. Shoichi Aoki - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoichi_Aoki

    Shoichi Aoki (青木 正一, Aoki Shōichi, born 1955) is a former computer programmer, now Japanese photographer, and creator of the magazines STREET, TUNE, and FRUiTS. He also subsequently created the Fruits and Fresh Fruits (collections of Japanese street fashion) photo books as a way of offering his photos to the foreign market.

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