Kimono Man 'Tokyo'
Complete the look
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The Ichimatsu Checkerboard, Japan's Most Enduring Pattern
Some patterns transcend their origins and become something larger — a visual language spoken across centuries without translation. The ichimatsu is one of them. Named after an Edo-period kabuki actor whose distinctive stage costume made it iconic, this alternating black and white checkerboard has appeared on Japanese robes, screens, ceramics and woodblock prints for over three hundred years. It is instantly recognisable, endlessly versatile, and completely timeless.
The Kimono Man 'Tokyo' is built entirely around it. Across a warm white ground, a dense micro-checkerboard in deep navy covers the full surface of this floor-length kimono from collar to hem — precise, rhythmic, unwavering. At this scale, the pattern creates an optical depth that gives the fabric an almost woven quality, the eye reading it simultaneously as flat graphic and as textured textile.
The effect is striking without being loud. This is a kimono that commands attention through geometry alone — no colour, no figurative motif, no ornament beyond the disciplined repetition of two tones in perfect alternation. It is the confidence of simplicity, the authority of a pattern that has nothing to prove.
A bicolour obi in deep burgundy and warm beige-gold anchors the monochrome with a single note of warmth, completing a look that moves effortlessly between traditional ceremony and contemporary style.
The obi is included with every order.