Obi Sash BeltsKimono Belt:

Kimono belt (Obi Sash Belts)is the the top-most sash worn with various styles of Japanese traditional clothing—KIMONO. usually about five or six centimetres wide and four metres or more in length. Kimono belt is traditionally made of silk, and silk is still the most traditional and formal material for it.

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Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Kimono belt

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

Obi Sash Belts

The kimono  is the home dress up of Japan. Originally the word "kimono" referred to whole types of clothing, but it has come to denote a special type of traditional full-length clothe.

Kimono are T-shaped, straight-lined robes that fall to the ankle, with collars and wide, full-length arms. Kimono is wrapped around the body, always with the left side over the right and secured by a wide belt called an obi, which is usually attached at the back. Kimonois commonly worn with traditional footwear and split-toe socks

Nowadays, kimono is almost often worn by women, and on special social occasion. Traditionally, single adult female wore a style of kimono called furisode, which have floor-length arms, on special social occasion. Some aged adult female and even fewer adult male still wear kimono on a day by day basis. Men wear kimono most often at marriages, chanoyus, and other very special or very formal occasions. Professional sumo wrestlers are often seen in kimono because it is required to wear traditional Japanese dress whenever appearing publically. They normally wear the kind of casual Japanese attire i.e. referred to as yukata, which is of plain unlined cotton.

Kimono hobbyists in Japanese Island can take courses on how to put on and wear kimono. Courses cover selecting seasonally and event-appropriate figures and textiles, matching the kimono undergarments and accessories to the kimono, layering the undergarments according to subtle significations, choosing and tying obi, and other themes. There are also clubs devoted to kimono culture, such as Kimono de Ginza.