Floral Japanese Sleepwear Set 'Komon'
Floral Japanese Sleepwear Set with Komon Print Top and Bordeaux Trousers
Komon is the name for the smallest, most repeated print on traditional kimono — a discipline of pattern where the motif stays so small it reads almost as texture from across a room, only revealing itself when you stand close. The set borrows that idea. The top runs in cream cotton scattered with small rose-pink florals — peonies and chamomile-style blossoms — the kind of spaced repetition that turns into a quiet field rather than a loud print. The bordeaux trim at the neckline picks up the deeper red of the trousers, which stay solid wine to anchor the composition.
The cut keeps the lounge silhouette without the wrap closure: a round-neck top with three-quarter sleeves and bordeaux trim at the collar, sleeve hem and back, pulled on rather than tied. The trousers are straight-cut with an elastic waist, falling to the ankle in solid bordeaux. The fabric is cotton with a soft hand, breathable for sleeping in. Sizes run M, L and XL; the cut is loose enough to layer over a slip, fitted enough to wear answering the door.
You get the round-neck top and matching wine trousers, packaged plainly. The print holds its tone through regular wear and gentle hand-washing. No costume packaging, no plastic accessory clutter, no fake silk gloss — just two pieces of textile that read as quietly Japanese without ever asking to be looked at.
Wear it as nightwear, as a long Sunday morning at home, as loungewear when the day has nothing booked into it. The top works alone with white denim, the trousers work alone with a plain ivory tank. It pairs with bare feet, with leather slippers, with low boots when the weather turns. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the indoor side — bookshelves, slow tea, soft light. Free standard delivery.
Original: $75.00
-65%$75.00
$26.25
Description
Floral Japanese Sleepwear Set with Komon Print Top and Bordeaux Trousers
Komon is the name for the smallest, most repeated print on traditional kimono — a discipline of pattern where the motif stays so small it reads almost as texture from across a room, only revealing itself when you stand close. The set borrows that idea. The top runs in cream cotton scattered with small rose-pink florals — peonies and chamomile-style blossoms — the kind of spaced repetition that turns into a quiet field rather than a loud print. The bordeaux trim at the neckline picks up the deeper red of the trousers, which stay solid wine to anchor the composition.
The cut keeps the lounge silhouette without the wrap closure: a round-neck top with three-quarter sleeves and bordeaux trim at the collar, sleeve hem and back, pulled on rather than tied. The trousers are straight-cut with an elastic waist, falling to the ankle in solid bordeaux. The fabric is cotton with a soft hand, breathable for sleeping in. Sizes run M, L and XL; the cut is loose enough to layer over a slip, fitted enough to wear answering the door.
You get the round-neck top and matching wine trousers, packaged plainly. The print holds its tone through regular wear and gentle hand-washing. No costume packaging, no plastic accessory clutter, no fake silk gloss — just two pieces of textile that read as quietly Japanese without ever asking to be looked at.
Wear it as nightwear, as a long Sunday morning at home, as loungewear when the day has nothing booked into it. The top works alone with white denim, the trousers work alone with a plain ivory tank. It pairs with bare feet, with leather slippers, with low boots when the weather turns. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the indoor side — bookshelves, slow tea, soft light. Free standard delivery.












