Cream Japanese Style Pajamas 'Yutori'
Cream Japanese Style Pajamas with Round Collar, Sage Trim and Wave Motif
Yutori is a Japanese word that has no clean English equivalent — it sits somewhere between space, slack and ease, the deliberate room left in a schedule, a fabric, a sentence. The set carries the idea. A natural cream double-gauze runs across both pieces, lighter than beige, slightly warmer than white. Sage green trims the round neckline and the knot fasteners at the chest, picks up again at the sleeve hem with the seigaiha wave motif embroidered in soft brown. The composition leaves a lot of cream untouched, and that emptiness is the point.
The cut follows a hotel-pajama silhouette: a pulled-on round-neck top with three-quarter sleeves and decorative knot fasteners at the chest, a clean back. The trousers are straight-cut with an elastic waist, falling to the ankle. Double-gauze cotton softens with every wash and gains its full hand after a few cycles. Sizes run M, L and XL; the cut is loose enough to sleep in, structured enough to walk through a hotel lobby in.
You get the top and matching trousers, packaged plainly. Double gauze is the fabric Japanese ryokan use for guest yukata and indoor wear — designed to breathe, absorb and soften. No costume packaging, no plastic accessory clutter, no fake silk gloss. Just two pieces of textile that read as quietly Japanese in any room.
Wear it as nightwear, as loungewear, as a travel pyjama you can pack flat and pull on after a long day. Wear the top alone over jeans, the trousers alone with a plain tank. It pairs with bare feet, with hotel slippers, with leather sandals on warmer days. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the architectural side — clean lines, paper screens, light handled like a material. Free standard delivery.
Original: $75.00
-65%$75.00
$26.25

Description
Cream Japanese Style Pajamas with Round Collar, Sage Trim and Wave Motif
Yutori is a Japanese word that has no clean English equivalent — it sits somewhere between space, slack and ease, the deliberate room left in a schedule, a fabric, a sentence. The set carries the idea. A natural cream double-gauze runs across both pieces, lighter than beige, slightly warmer than white. Sage green trims the round neckline and the knot fasteners at the chest, picks up again at the sleeve hem with the seigaiha wave motif embroidered in soft brown. The composition leaves a lot of cream untouched, and that emptiness is the point.
The cut follows a hotel-pajama silhouette: a pulled-on round-neck top with three-quarter sleeves and decorative knot fasteners at the chest, a clean back. The trousers are straight-cut with an elastic waist, falling to the ankle. Double-gauze cotton softens with every wash and gains its full hand after a few cycles. Sizes run M, L and XL; the cut is loose enough to sleep in, structured enough to walk through a hotel lobby in.
You get the top and matching trousers, packaged plainly. Double gauze is the fabric Japanese ryokan use for guest yukata and indoor wear — designed to breathe, absorb and soften. No costume packaging, no plastic accessory clutter, no fake silk gloss. Just two pieces of textile that read as quietly Japanese in any room.
Wear it as nightwear, as loungewear, as a travel pyjama you can pack flat and pull on after a long day. Wear the top alone over jeans, the trousers alone with a plain tank. It pairs with bare feet, with hotel slippers, with leather sandals on warmer days. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the architectural side — clean lines, paper screens, light handled like a material. Free standard delivery.












