Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Japanese dress etiquette for weddings and funerals

Japanese dress etiquette for weddings and funerals

Breaking off work for a few days, in fact, there is no vacation nor stopping work, because the textbook thing has been working hard to write, has almost 40,000 words. I've thought about going on strike countless times, but when I think about how much more I want to accomplish, I don't dare to stop. The desire to express myself every day is really limited, and until I finish the textbook, I'll probably be updating a bit less. I hope to understand.

In Japan, white is used for weddings and black for funerals.

On the street, you can tell whether a Japanese man is attending a wedding or a funeral just by his clothes, because only when he attends a funeral, he will even be decorated in black, and the difference between attending a wedding and a funeral is only that the wedding is wearing a white tie, while the funeral is wearing a black tie.

The child wears a black dress to the funeral and a black dress to the wedding, but must wear some white decorations - a black dress with a snow-white flower is not a bad idea.

Not only the people attending the wedding, in the Japanese traditional wedding, the bride's clothing is pure white, the meaning of which is "white and immaculate", the beauty of the Japanese bride is also embodied in the white as snow, as pure as water in the body, so that people feel the simplicity of life through.

The following picture is a woman's photo of a Japanese wedding ceremony in front of the god, small hand point a little, careful heart go up~