Men's Indigo Hakama Pants 'Itoburu'
Men's Indigo Hakama Pants with Wide-Leg Cut and Decorative Ribbon
Itoburu is the Japanglish for indigo blue — ito for thread, buru for blue, the colour Japanese textile workers pulled from indigo vats for centuries to dye the work clothes of farmers, dock hands, shop apprentices. The hakama keeps that lineage. The cut is the traditional wide-legged silhouette, ankle-length, anchored by an elastic waist and finished with a decorative ribbon that hangs at the front — a quiet reference to the obi-jime cord that secured the original koshi-ita panel. The indigo holds dark and warm at the same time.
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 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 and white trainers for a clean weekend look, or with a black knit and worn leather boots when the air turns cooler. They pair as naturally with a denim jacket as they do with a kimono cardigan, and they hold their own at home as loungewear too. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the heritage side — without ever feeling like a costume.
Original: $75.00
-65%$75.00
$26.25
Description
Men's Indigo Hakama Pants with Wide-Leg Cut and Decorative Ribbon
Itoburu is the Japanglish for indigo blue — ito for thread, buru for blue, the colour Japanese textile workers pulled from indigo vats for centuries to dye the work clothes of farmers, dock hands, shop apprentices. The hakama keeps that lineage. The cut is the traditional wide-legged silhouette, ankle-length, anchored by an elastic waist and finished with a decorative ribbon that hangs at the front — a quiet reference to the obi-jime cord that secured the original koshi-ita panel. The indigo holds dark and warm at the same time.
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 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 and white trainers for a clean weekend look, or with a black knit and worn leather boots when the air turns cooler. They pair as naturally with a denim jacket as they do with a kimono cardigan, and they hold their own at home as loungewear too. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the heritage side — without ever feeling like a costume.










