Women's Black Pleated Hakama Skirt 'Jiminakuro'
Women's Black Pleated Hakama Skirt with Chiffon Overlay and Side Bow
Jiminakuro means plain black — jimina for understated, modest, restrained, kuro for black. The combination is precise: the skirt is dark, but never loud. Knife pleats run from waist to hem, a sheer chiffon overlay catches light and movement, a side bow tied at the waist nods quietly to the traditional koshi-ita and obi closure. The black holds the eye without claiming the room. It's the most tea-room piece in the line — restrained, considered, ready for any setting.
The cut is high-waisted with a structured band, fastening with a side zip and finished with a self-tie bow. The pleats fall to just below mid-calf and the chiffon underlayer adds a second moving layer that floats slightly behind the body. The fabric is a polyester chiffon with a soft drape, smooth against the skin, easy to layer. Sizes run S, M, L and XL; the silhouette stays fitted at the waist, full at the hem, never bulky.
You get the skirt as a single piece. 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 it with a fitted black turtleneck for evening, or with a white shirt tucked in and Mary-Jane shoes for daytime. It pairs as cleanly with sheer tights and ankle boots as it does with bare legs and slip-ons in summer. Black is rarely the loudest colour in a room — and this skirt knows it. The pleats fall, the chiffon shifts, and the rest of the room can keep talking.
Original: $50.00
-65%$50.00
$17.50
Description
Women's Black Pleated Hakama Skirt with Chiffon Overlay and Side Bow
Jiminakuro means plain black — jimina for understated, modest, restrained, kuro for black. The combination is precise: the skirt is dark, but never loud. Knife pleats run from waist to hem, a sheer chiffon overlay catches light and movement, a side bow tied at the waist nods quietly to the traditional koshi-ita and obi closure. The black holds the eye without claiming the room. It's the most tea-room piece in the line — restrained, considered, ready for any setting.
The cut is high-waisted with a structured band, fastening with a side zip and finished with a self-tie bow. The pleats fall to just below mid-calf and the chiffon underlayer adds a second moving layer that floats slightly behind the body. The fabric is a polyester chiffon with a soft drape, smooth against the skin, easy to layer. Sizes run S, M, L and XL; the silhouette stays fitted at the waist, full at the hem, never bulky.
You get the skirt as a single piece. 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 it with a fitted black turtleneck for evening, or with a white shirt tucked in and Mary-Jane shoes for daytime. It pairs as cleanly with sheer tights and ankle boots as it does with bare legs and slip-ons in summer. Black is rarely the loudest colour in a room — and this skirt knows it. The pleats fall, the chiffon shifts, and the rest of the room can keep talking.










