The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Frenchman shares love of kimono culture in Tora-san’s hometown

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TOKYO: The Shibamata neighbourh­ood is well known as the setting for the longrunnin­g “Otoko wa Tsurai yo” (It’s Tough Being a Man) movie series featuring the kind-hearted vagabond Tora-san.

It is also where a young Frenchman has chosen to open a unique kimono shop, in which he displays, sells and rents antique kimono.

“From a foreigner’s point of view, Japanese kimono are extremely beautiful,” says Thomas Kohler, the 23-year-old proprietor of Konjaku Kimono Komichi. “I want people to have a more casual approach toward kimono and have fun wearing them,” he said.

One afternoon in early December last year, a group of five men and women clad in kimono could be spotted walking down the main approach to the Shibamata Taishakute­n temple. They were taking part in the “Shibamata kimono group stroll,” an event organised by Kohler. Sojin Okada, a 17-year-old who participat­ed with a friend, said, “Kimono always seemed beyond my reach. But after wearing one, I realized it doesn’t feel awkward at all.”

Kohler opened his shop in July last year in a residentia­l area just a three-minute walk from Shibamata Station. “(The neighbourh­ood) still provides a glimpse of beautiful Japan,” he said, explaining why he chose the area.

A dyed-in-the-wool Frenchman, Kohler developed an interest in Japanese culture, such as flower arrangemen­t and the tea ceremony, online and through reading books. Wanting to see it for himself, he came to Japan at age 18.

While attending a Japanese language school in Tokyo over a two-year period, he also worked part-time at a shop in Asakusa that sold and rented used kimono.

During lulls in business, he would look closely at each of the garments and gained a sense of their appeal, from the vibrantly colored fabrics of daily-use kimono to ones with mysterious patterns.

Kohler decided to open a shop in which to stock antique kimono that had been left untouched in people’s drawers, giving them a new lease on life.

With the support of people he met through his part-time job, he opened the shop in Shibamata. He collected about 600 kimono from the Meiji (1868-1912), Taisho (1912-1926), Showa (19261989) and Heisei (1989-) eras. In addition to selling and renting the clothing, he converted part of the shop into a salon, where he has held kimono-wearing classes, shamisen recitals and other events.

Kohler also has the backing of the local community. He has been allowed to put up a signboard in front of Shibamata Station at no cost, and neighbours have helped with promotiona­l activities.

One problem he encountere­d was that few of the tourists visiting Shibamata were trying on his kimono so he came up with the idea for the kimono stroll as a way to promote the shop.

In April, Kohler plans to hold an event called “Coming-of-Age Day once more,” in which the female participan­ts, regardless of age, will stroll through town wearing long-sleeved kimono called furisode - which are traditiona­lly reserved for unmarried women.

“I’m looking forward to the day when the approach at Shibamata Taishakute­n is filled with people wearing kimono,” Kohler said.

As he waits for business to take off at his humble shop, Kohler said he hopes more people will come to appreciate kimono by visiting Shibamata. — Yomiuri Shimbun

 ??  ?? Thomas Kohler walks with participan­ts in the “Shibamata kimono group stroll” on the approach to the Shibamata Taishakute­n temple in Tokyo. — Japan News-Yomiuri photo
Thomas Kohler walks with participan­ts in the “Shibamata kimono group stroll” on the approach to the Shibamata Taishakute­n temple in Tokyo. — Japan News-Yomiuri photo

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