Men's White Hakama Pants 'Shiroumare'
Men's White Hakama Pants with Wide-Leg Cut and Red Decorative Ribbon
Shiroumare means born white — shiro for white, umare for born, that clean unbleached tone the Japanese textile tradition reserved for ceremonial and ritual garments. The hakama keeps the traditional wide-legged silhouette: ankle-length, anchored by an elastic waist, finished with a red decorative ribbon that hangs at the front — a quiet reference to the obi-jime cord that secured the original koshi-ita panel. The white holds the room, the red ribbon brings the heat.
The cut runs wide through the leg with a generous drape, gathered at the elastic waistband and falling to the ankle. The fabric is a cotton-and-polyester blend with a natural matte finish, breathable in summer and layerable in cooler months. The decorative ribbon detaches if you prefer a cleaner front. Sizes run M, L, XL, XXL and 3XL — the silhouette stays loose by design, so size by waist and let the leg fall as it wants.
You get the hakama pants and the matching red decorative ribbon. The colour holds its tone through regular wear and gentle hand-washing. No costume packaging, no plastic accessory clutter — just one garment, ready to be folded into your wardrobe alongside the rest of what you actually wear.
Wear them with a plain white tee for full white-on-white, or with a black knit and dark boots when the contrast carries the look. They pair as cleanly with a denim jacket as they do with a kimono cardigan, and hold their own at home as loungewear too. White hakama have always been ceremonial in Japanese tradition — purification rituals, summer matsuri, formal court — and even pared down to contemporary fabric, the silhouette remembers it.
Original: $75.00
-65%$75.00
$26.25
Description
Men's White Hakama Pants with Wide-Leg Cut and Red Decorative Ribbon
Shiroumare means born white — shiro for white, umare for born, that clean unbleached tone the Japanese textile tradition reserved for ceremonial and ritual garments. The hakama keeps the traditional wide-legged silhouette: ankle-length, anchored by an elastic waist, finished with a red decorative ribbon that hangs at the front — a quiet reference to the obi-jime cord that secured the original koshi-ita panel. The white holds the room, the red ribbon brings the heat.
The cut runs wide through the leg with a generous drape, gathered at the elastic waistband and falling to the ankle. The fabric is a cotton-and-polyester blend with a natural matte finish, breathable in summer and layerable in cooler months. The decorative ribbon detaches if you prefer a cleaner front. Sizes run M, L, XL, XXL and 3XL — the silhouette stays loose by design, so size by waist and let the leg fall as it wants.
You get the hakama pants and the matching red decorative ribbon. The colour holds its tone through regular wear and gentle hand-washing. No costume packaging, no plastic accessory clutter — just one garment, ready to be folded into your wardrobe alongside the rest of what you actually wear.
Wear them with a plain white tee for full white-on-white, or with a black knit and dark boots when the contrast carries the look. They pair as cleanly with a denim jacket as they do with a kimono cardigan, and hold their own at home as loungewear too. White hakama have always been ceremonial in Japanese tradition — purification rituals, summer matsuri, formal court — and even pared down to contemporary fabric, the silhouette remembers it.










