- with the
inner edge left open past the shoulder. This both
allows the
underkimono (juban) to show when worn, and also
allows the obi to be tied around...
- Hand-colored
silver albumen photograph depicting a Meiji-period
woman wearing a
kimono with an
underkimono patterned with chrysanthemums...
-
unbelted over the top of the
underkimono,
which featured a
patterned design only on the
lower skirt, and
resembled a
juban (
underkimono; part of
kimono underwear)...
- they were
banned altogether, and were
transferred to the
collar of the
underkimono, or the
inside of the hem,
where only the
faintest glimpse would be intermittently...
-
These garments typically include a sash and a
collar as well as an
underkimono (juban), a kimono, and a
haori or an
outer robe (uchikake). In order...
-
relatively far back,
accentuating (for maiko) the red
collar of the
underkimono (juban), and
displaying (for both
maiko and geisha) the two or three...
- and
changes in appearance, such as
wearing a
plain white collar on the
underkimono (juban)
instead of the
embroidered red-and-white
attached collar (han'eri)...
-
Traditional items of
clothing that were not kimono, such as
nagajuban (
underkimono),
haori (jackets worn over kimono) and
haura (the
decorative inner linings...
- (kosode) with a
design inspired by the
Eight Views of Ōmi, 1780–1820
Underkimono for a man (juban)
using imported Indian fabrics, 1800–1850
Outer kimono...