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The Kamakura Period (1185-1333) and The Muromachi Period (1333-1490)
The Feudal Era in Japan Women's Clothing The Kamakura Period ( ) and The Muromachi Period ( )
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Pre-Kamakura - Heian Period
-division appears in the social classes -the formation of the aristocracy -everyday clothing vs. formal attire
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The Feudal Era: Commoners
-clothes made for durability -hemp -practicality in design
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The Feudal Era: Nobility
-ornamental decoration -formal attire required several layers -for daily wear some layers are removed
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Early Kamakura Period
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Mid-Late Kamakura Period
Extravagant to Restrained
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Muromachi Period
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Samurai Women
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Kimono (Clothing) Style
-visible sign of taste, social attitude and status -showcase for pattern and color -brightness of color -left over right -sleeve length
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Kimono (Clothing) Style
-visible sign of taste, social attitude and status -showcase for pattern and color -brightness of color -left over right -sleeve length
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Kimono (Clothing) Style
-visible sign of taste, social attitude and status -showcase for pattern and color -brightness of color -left over right -sleeve length
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gender, life/death, season, age, formality, and propriety
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Works Cited Assmann, Stephanie. "Between tradition and innovation: the reinvention of the kimono in Japanese consumer culture." Fashion Theory: The Journal of Dress, Body & Culture 12.3 (2008): Boettcher, Cheryl. "The kimono imagined." (1987). Elina, Shireen. The Development of Kimono in Japanese Civilization. Diss. Universiti Malaya, 2005. Frederic, Louis. “Daily life in Japan at the time of the Samurai, Charles Tuttle. Tokyo, Japan French, Marilyn. From Eve to Dawn, Volume 2 : A History of Women. New York, NY, USA: The Feminist Press at CUNY, ProQuest ebrary. Web. 4 June 2015. Square, Vicki. Knit Kimono. Betterway Books, 2013.
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