Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional festivals - Why do you call "kimono" "yukata"?

Why do you call "kimono" "yukata"?

I didn't get the question, but why do you call "kimono" "yukata", you're asking the wrong question, kimono is kimono, yukata is yukata, they are different!

Also, if you ask for aliases for kimono, there are many!

First of all, the generic term, the origin of the Japanese kimono, is the Chinese Wu clothing, why I do not know, table ask me.

Before the Edo period, the word "bath" in kimono meant "hot water", and at that time people called kimono "Yukatabira". Yukatabira refers to a single garment, i.e., a garment to be worn alone. In ancient times, baths were basically steam baths, much like saunas today. People wore yukatabira in order to protect themselves from being burned by the walls and pillars. The name "kimono" was first introduced in the Edo period.

The form of bathing was gradually changed so that people no longer wore clothes but were immersed in hot water. As a result, the kimono became a simple garment to wear after bathing.

Today's kimonos are very different from yukatas because, through the passage of time, there are many different types of kimonos, and the colors, textures, and styles of kimonos have changed over the years. Not only is there a clear difference between men and women (men's kimonos are monotonous in color and black, with fewer styles, thin belts, simple accessories, and easy to wear; women's kimonos are colorful, with wide belts and a variety of types, styles, and accessories), but also, depending on the occasion and the time of day, different kimonos are worn to show the seriousness of the occasion (women's kimonos include wedding kimonos, adult kimonos, evening kimonos, banquet kimonos, and evening kimonos), but also, depending on the occasion and the time of year, different kimonos are worn. (women's kimonos include wedding kimonos, adult kimonos, evening kimonos, banquet kimonos, and general dresses). The weaving, dyeing, and embroidery of the kimono itself, as well as the elaborate rules for wearing the kimono (clogs, socks, and different hairstyles depending on the type of kimono) have made it a kind of work of art, and so it is possible to call the kimono a yukata, but the yukata faza is only a branch of the kimono and is a type of kimono today, so yukata = kimono and kimono is not the same as a yukata!

To understand the kimono, push a web page ...... The above answer is their own organization, no plagiarism.

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