Fond of fundoshi?

FundoshiHey, JAPUNDITs, here’s a change to get your big break in modeling. Graphic designer Yukie Kaneko is looking for gaijin men to model her new fundoshi collection. Fundoshi are traditional Japanese undergarments that are similar to a loin cloth.

The shoots will be in Tokyo, both indoors and out. No compensation, but heck, how often is it that you can get your picture taken in the near buff.

Send e-mail here for more info: web@ichizen-jp.com

Via Jean Snow

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Fashion In Japan

The combination of a slow news day and other real-world concerns it making it hard to post today, so here is BBC a report that though a bit dated, provides a pretty good idea of young woman fashion in Japan that is still pretty applicable today.

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Chinese foot binding

We all have heard of how foot binding was (and apparently still is in some areas) practiced in China, but these are the first photos I have ever seen of this gruesome practice.

Foot binding

Foot binding

More here.

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Hello Kitty disaster kit

Hello Earthquake

No need to look uncute as your home and the world as you know it is crashing down all around you with this fashionably pink Hello Kitty disaster kit, which includes:

  • Disaster hood (covering Body)
  • Flame retardant blanket
  • Pouch
  • Crime-prevention buzzer
  • Bandanas

Price: 9,800 yen

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18-carat Kitty

Solid gold KittyGold & Jewelry Tamaya of Sapporo has started selling an 18-carat gold Hello Kitty mobile phone strap.

Tamaya came out with the mobile phone strap to mark the 10th anniversary of the launch of the series of Hello Kitty products made to commemorate particular places in Japan. The 1.8 gram gold Hello Kitty was made by Tanaka Kikinzoku Jewelry in Tokyo’s Ginza. Normally, Hello Kitty has a red ribbon in her hair, but the mobile phone strap version uses a lavender-colored ribbon as lavender is strongly associated with Hokkaido.

Lavender is said to mean “waiting for you,” and the jewelers are eagerly awaiting orders.

Price: 50,000 yen

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Wondering what to wear to the beach this summer?

Click the image below for details.

Jbikinis

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Tokyo’s rockabilly dancers of Harajuku Park

The last of the old takenoko-zoku group still rocks away

Rockers1

Tokyo rockabilly dancers of Harajuku Park

Tokyo’s Harajuku Park has become internationally famous over recent years mainly for its collection of high school students decked out in wild Goth outfits and makeup. Just about every Sunday they can be found sitting around in groups with their similarly attired peers coolly ignoring the camera flashes exploding all about them.

Rockers2

One of the current Harajuku Park denizens

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TOKYOLOGY on BoingBoing TV

The folks over at BoingBoing TV have written in to alert us to something called TOKYOLOGY, a new documentary exploring contemporary Japanese pop-culture hosted by Carrie Ann Inaba.

Oh, what adventures await: sneak behind the scenes at a Japanese Rock TV show that pretends it’s shot in Los Angeles, cruise Harajuku, go clubbing with goth girls in Shinjuku, shop for shoes with Lolitas, experience the madness of the Tokyo Anime Fair, visit a video game company, browse the streets of Akihabara, and meet anime creator Yoshitoshi Abe.

DVDs are available in retail stores and online, tokyology.tv has details.

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Current Obsession

tdw31sblu_web.jpg

I’m currently in love with this watch by LA based designer Tokidoki. The designer, Simone Legno, is actually from Italy, but with a keen eye, and a sense of humor (not to mention a Japanese girlfriend), he’s created a world of charming characters that remind one of the playful sensibility pervading the world of anime. No wonder he has a devoted cult following.

This summer is supposed to see the launch of several new Tokidoki products, including a special bag for Sportsac and a collaboration with Onitsuka Tiger. I’m really curious to see what the items will look like!

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Haruki Murakami and His Generation

I often have conversations with a slightly older generation of people in Japan about how cultural values have changed, and how youth no longer respect their elders. An izakaya owner put it to me like this: “They are now more individual, but they do not have the respect for tradition that we did.” It’s a lament you hear constantly.

harukimurakami.jpgIt was interesting, therefore, to read Haruki Murakami’s thoughts on the subject in a somewhat rare interview published in the Japan Times, which I’d encourage all of you interested in contemporary Japan to read. Some salient quotes:

Murakami, 59, is a baby boomer who is deeply interested in the problems of his generation. “Our generation tended to pick the best of everything by upholding idealism while engaged in a revolutionary struggle without believing in a revolution.”

But once members of this generation graduated from school, many became company employees. “This time, they became corporate soldiers, developed the economy, created a bubble and called it quits by bursting it. The baby-boom generation was at its core. So, I think someone has to take responsibility.”

I found this notion that Murakami’s generation was engaged in revolution–without actually believing in revolution–fascinating, as though there really is a half-way commitment to change. Certainly Japundit has fostered numerous conversations over the years about how slowly change takes place, and how uncommitted people are to seeing it through.

The collapse of the bubble economy in the first half of the 1990s coincided with the collapse of the Cold War structure. Everybody thought peace was at hand, but what came was a chaotic world.

“Especially after Sept. 11 (2001), we live in a world in which nobody knows what will happen next. My novels are about stories in which nobody knows what will happen next. That may be the reason readers have an affinity for my novels.”

The Japanese also harbored the illusion that if they worked hard, they would become rich and happy, but that has been totally crushed. “So, they were forced to face the facts about what they are. But that is very uncomfortable.”

On a somewhat related note, I was curious to see very few Louis Vuitton handbags in Japan this time around. Even a few years ago, the outrageously expensive (and to my eye, bland) Hermes tote bag seemed to be everywhere. I have no real way of proving what I saw–aside from a bunch of photos of people in trains not carrying designer gear. Perhaps there is a change of sorts, more in attitude than anything else, about wealth and the future and relating to the world at large. Others disagree, and perhaps are completely correct.

What do all of you out there think: is the baby boomer generation, as Murakami suggests, not committed to change? And on a shallow note, do you see fewer brand items circulating around?

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Gotta be kawaii at all times

There’s a report in the Mainichi entitled Booming popularity doubles accident rate at Tokyo’s Mt. Takao, which tells that “there were 43 reported accidents on the mountain last year, almost double the average number from each year from 2004 to 2006.”

Those who go unprepared come in for a roasting from Kenichiro Maruyama, head of the Takao Police Station’s Alpine Rescue Taskforce who says, “OK, so it’s only a small mountain, but it’s a mountain nonetheless. Not thinking enough about what’s needed for mountain climbing is inviting trouble.”

Quite so.

Police are urging anybody visiting Mt. Takao to take appropriate preparations beforehand, including having a plan on how to get down the mountain, preparing sufficient equipment such as water, rain gear and flashlights, understand that mobile phones won’t always work in the area and make reports on planned hikes on Mt. Takao before setting off.

To further underline this point about lack of preparedness, the report states that “many accidents are reported among [...] women going to the mountain while wearing high-heeled shoes.”

A group of Japanese mountaineers, yesterday
A group of Japanese mountaineers setting out on an expedition, yesterday

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Japanese school uniforms

School uniforms

Everything you’ve ever wanted to know about Japanese school uniforms here.

Thanks to Len Cullum.

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Placenta products

Steve Levenstein writes in to alert us to a new article he has written about Japanese beauty products made from the placentas of pigs and other creatures.

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A very ‘Japanese’ rose

Laurel posted a great story over at A Rinkya Blog, just in time for next week’s White Day (March 14).

If you’re not familiar with ‘White Day’, and if you don’t live in Japan, there’s no reason you should be, it comes a month after Valentine’s Day and it’s a day the guys have to reciprocate for all the chocolate they received the month before from nearly every female they know.

Well gents, depending on the ladies you know, and how much money you have burning a hole in your pocket, this year there’s a gift that really represents modern Japan.

This White Day, French fashion designer Louis Vuitton has white monogrammed roses for 4000 yen each (approximately $39 USD each)

The special Louis Vuitton rose is available for a limited time only and looks great paired with a purse!

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Titty & Co.

You would think that companies in Japan would have the sense to check with native speakers before choosing names based on English or other languages. . . But then if they did, there would be no Engrish, would there.

Titty & Co.

Titty & Co. is a company that produces clothing for women.

Via Japan Market News

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pumas, fujoshi, and yoai porn cafes…oh my

in what is one of the more disturbing trends in contemporary japan, the maid cafes and other perverted male otaku hang outs have spawned a new branch of cafes for female otaku, ones based one gay comic book porn. that’s right, women who want to indulge their childhood fantasy of young effeminate men dressed in high school uniforms flirting with each other, engaging in oral sex, or brutally anal raping each other finally have an outlet for their fetish.

now if you’re anything like me, your fist reaction to this article might be, oh say, wtf? but apparently in japan’s never ending quest to cater to every possible kink, they have stumbled across a sizable subset of female otaku that just can’t get enough of yoai manga and doujinshi. as a consequence proprietors sensing an opportunity for profit have created bars and restaurants much like the one featured in this article. run by a woman by the name of emiko sakamaki, the place goes by the name of edlestein (named after a yoai comic set in a german high school) and features a staff of young cosmetically enhanced men. according to her and others the market is driven by the atmosphere of female indulgence that has been of which japan has, until this time, been bereft of, combined with the popularity of anime and manga, complicated by the desire for relationships which transcend traditional gender roles, all united by a sample population of young to middle aged single women who appreciate the unparalleled beauty of a fragile young teenager being raped by other men (preferably in groups).

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Nice tat

Not all that safe for work. Click here to see it.

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Utsunomiya kigurumin

While strolling through Utsunomiya Station with the charming and delightful Mrs. JP today, we spotted a pair of real live kigurumin (girls who wear a type of pajama-suit that resembles an animal and sometimes cartoon characters) strolling along off in the distance.

Much to the dismay of Mrs. JP, I was off in a flash, digging my trusty EXILIM digital camera out of my pocket as I trotted through the station. I introduced myself to the girls and they kindly agreed to pose especially for you, dear JAPUNDIT readers.

Kigurumin in Utsunomiya

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Blue and white fight no contest

Blue or whiteIn case you were losing sleep wondering about it, a study conducted at University of Glasgow has come to the conclusion that the color of a judoka’s gi (uniform) does not affect the outcome of the match. Apparently, there were studies out there that claimed blue uniforms provided some sort of edge over white ones.

An examination of 501 gold-medal finals in international competitions between 1996 and 2005 showed that the color of the uniform worn by the winner was split evenly between blue and white, the study found.
“We focused on judo but the finding may have wider implications for sports in general,” said Peter Dijkstra, a behavioral biologist at the University of Glasgow, who led the study. “We show there is no color association for a winning bias.”

Past studies claimed that blue make the wearer appear more intimidating or white made the moves of the wearer more visible, giving an advantage to the more colorful competitor.

According to the new Glasgow study, previous studies did not take into account that it was often the more skilled judoka who preferred blue.

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A new slant on eye surgery fashion

Here’s a switch for you. . . Angela Bismarchi, a Brazilian model who has been under the plastic surgeon’s knife a total 41 times plans to celebrate 100 years of Japanese immigration to Brazil by having nylon wires implanted in her eyes to give them an oriental slant.

The 36-year-old, whose passion for plastic surgery has made her a celebrity in Brazil, said: “I always was vain. And for carnival, you have to feel especially pretty.”

Bismarchi, who is 6 feet tall and promotes a lingerie collection, is married to a plastic surgeon — he has operated on her 10 times.

Her former husband also was a plastic surgeon.

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