Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 1, Winter 2014 | Page 45

The Case of the Dying Kimono 41 have allowed wearers to remain more comfortable in the hot and humid Japanese summers. As is often the case with clothing, the design and purpose evolved and later, layered fashions moved away from the earlier, more functional style. Clothing of the Nara period (646-794) was strongly influenced by the Tang Dynasty; however, during the Heian period (794 - 1185), a variation of the kimono was worn by the aristocracy at the Imperial court. By the Kamakura period (1185 - 1336), the fashion changed as members of the rising military aristocracy adopted the underkimono worn by the Heian aristocracy as an outer garment because it allowed for greater ease of movement. The garment was called a kosode which means “small sleeves.” ® Fashion continued to evolve during the Kamakura and Muromachi periods, but was still largely influenced by the needs of the warrior aristocracy. With the arrival of the Tokugawa Shogunate and a more settled political and military environment, the seventeenth century became a golden period for the kosode. These changes were stimulated by the growth of the merchant class as well as influence from Noh dramas and courtesans who were often fashion innovators. Courtesans often wore their kosode with long, tasseled cords, wrapped around the hips six or seven times. This was called a Nagoya obi and was based upon a fashion in China.’ Around the middle of the Edo period, the focus slowly shifted from the kimono to the obi. During this time, many women began to wear obi with a furisode, or long-sleeved kimono, imitating courtesans and Kabuki actors. Encouraged by the consumerism of the growing merchant class, the kosode became a canvas for innovative weaving and dyeing techniques such as yuzen, a complicated wax resist technique, and bold designs including floral patterns and scenes from literature.* The shift to the modem kimono occurred