Cream Cute Japanese Dress 'Sōka'
Cream Cute Japanese Dress with Peter Pan Collar and Lace Skirt
Sōka borrows its name from 草花, the old Japanese reading for grass-flowers — those small wildflower portraits that filled Edo-period botanical scrolls. The cream cute Japanese dress draws on the same softness: a gentle apricot palette, a quiet collar, the kind of restraint Taisho-era illustrators used when they wanted Western tailoring to still feel native. Between 1912 and 1926, Tokyo women blended European blouses with traditional sensibility, and Sōka sits inside that lineage rather than outside it.
The set comes in two pieces. The top is woven cotton with a wide peter-pan collar trimmed in narrow lace, short puff sleeves with elastic cuffs, a vertical pin-tuck panel and a small ribbon bow at the throat. The skirt is woven in apricot tone with a high lace-up corset waistband, hidden side-seam pockets, a full gathered drop and a scalloped lace hem visible underneath. The cut runs slim through the bodice and full through the skirt, sizes S, M, L and XL. The waist elastic stretches across the range, so chest and length dictate the size more than waist.
What you receive: top and skirt as a coordinated cute Japanese dress set, packed flat in a recyclable kraft mailer with no plastic, no costume framing, no paper accessories. Labels stay minimal. Ribbons come pressed in their own paper sleeve so they arrive uncreased. We don't sell this as fancy-dress for a theme night. We sell it as a piece you wear on a Saturday in Aoyama, the way a Tokyo woman who reads Hanatsubaki magazine would wear it — sneakers, a tote, a flat white and a paperback.
How to wear: the top alone with denim and loafers reads cleaner Aoyama café, and with the skirt the full Taisho silhouette. White leather sneakers keep the line modern. A short kimono jacket in indigo or black layers cleanly on cooler mornings. The cream tone reads warm under any light, pulls toward beige in shadow, and pairs particularly well with our brick red and lavender pieces from the same series for those who collect colorways. Sōka is the quietest entry of the line, and the easiest to start with.
Measurements taken flat. Chest is half-bust circumference, waist is elasticated and stretches across the range, body length is shoulder to top hem, dress length is total skirt drop.
| Size | Chest (in) | Waist (in) | Body length (in) | Dress length (in) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S | 37.8 | 27.6 – 39.4 | 22.0 | 35.4 |
| M | 40.2 | 27.6 – 39.4 | 22.4 | 35.4 |
| L | 42.5 | 27.6 – 39.4 | 22.8 | 35.8 |
| XL | 44.9 | 27.6 – 39.4 | 23.2 | 35.8 |
The cut runs slim through the bodice and full through the skirt. Sizes S, M, L and XL.

Description
Cream Cute Japanese Dress with Peter Pan Collar and Lace Skirt
Sōka borrows its name from 草花, the old Japanese reading for grass-flowers — those small wildflower portraits that filled Edo-period botanical scrolls. The cream cute Japanese dress draws on the same softness: a gentle apricot palette, a quiet collar, the kind of restraint Taisho-era illustrators used when they wanted Western tailoring to still feel native. Between 1912 and 1926, Tokyo women blended European blouses with traditional sensibility, and Sōka sits inside that lineage rather than outside it.
The set comes in two pieces. The top is woven cotton with a wide peter-pan collar trimmed in narrow lace, short puff sleeves with elastic cuffs, a vertical pin-tuck panel and a small ribbon bow at the throat. The skirt is woven in apricot tone with a high lace-up corset waistband, hidden side-seam pockets, a full gathered drop and a scalloped lace hem visible underneath. The cut runs slim through the bodice and full through the skirt, sizes S, M, L and XL. The waist elastic stretches across the range, so chest and length dictate the size more than waist.
What you receive: top and skirt as a coordinated cute Japanese dress set, packed flat in a recyclable kraft mailer with no plastic, no costume framing, no paper accessories. Labels stay minimal. Ribbons come pressed in their own paper sleeve so they arrive uncreased. We don't sell this as fancy-dress for a theme night. We sell it as a piece you wear on a Saturday in Aoyama, the way a Tokyo woman who reads Hanatsubaki magazine would wear it — sneakers, a tote, a flat white and a paperback.
How to wear: the top alone with denim and loafers reads cleaner Aoyama café, and with the skirt the full Taisho silhouette. White leather sneakers keep the line modern. A short kimono jacket in indigo or black layers cleanly on cooler mornings. The cream tone reads warm under any light, pulls toward beige in shadow, and pairs particularly well with our brick red and lavender pieces from the same series for those who collect colorways. Sōka is the quietest entry of the line, and the easiest to start with.
Measurements taken flat. Chest is half-bust circumference, waist is elasticated and stretches across the range, body length is shoulder to top hem, dress length is total skirt drop.
| Size | Chest (in) | Waist (in) | Body length (in) | Dress length (in) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| S | 37.8 | 27.6 – 39.4 | 22.0 | 35.4 |
| M | 40.2 | 27.6 – 39.4 | 22.4 | 35.4 |
| L | 42.5 | 27.6 – 39.4 | 22.8 | 35.8 |
| XL | 44.9 | 27.6 – 39.4 | 23.2 | 35.8 |
The cut runs slim through the bodice and full through the skirt. Sizes S, M, L and XL.













