Women's Beige Hakama Skirt 'Raitobeju'
Women's Beige Hakama Skirt with Asymmetric Hem and Soft A-Line Drape
Raitobeju is the Japanglish for light beige — the colour of unbleached cotton, of raw linen, of a tatami mat at noon. The skirt borrows the silhouette of the traditional hakama and pares it down: no pleats, no internal divider, just a long A-line cut with an asymmetric hem that opens slightly toward the front. It reads more like a contemporary midi skirt than a ceremonial garment, but the lineage stays visible — the volume, the fall, the way it moves on the body. It's the most pared-back piece in the line.
The cut is high-waisted with a wide elastic band, sitting just below the natural waist for comfort. The hem falls to mid-calf, slightly longer at the back, slightly shorter at the front — the kind of asymmetry old Japanese textile dyers used to balance volume against movement. The fabric is a cotton-blend weave with a natural matte finish, breathable in summer and layerable in cooler months. Sizes run M, L, XL and XXL; the silhouette stays loose at the hem, fitted at the waist.
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 black tee tucked in and white trainers for a clean Daikanyama feel, or with a fitted knit and ankle boots when the weather turns. It pairs as easily with a slip top for evening as it does with a denim jacket for weekend errands. The beige is the kind of neutral that lets every other piece in the wardrobe do its work — closer to raw linen than to khaki, closer to a tatami mat than to sand.
Original: $55.00
-65%$55.00
$19.25
Description
Women's Beige Hakama Skirt with Asymmetric Hem and Soft A-Line Drape
Raitobeju is the Japanglish for light beige — the colour of unbleached cotton, of raw linen, of a tatami mat at noon. The skirt borrows the silhouette of the traditional hakama and pares it down: no pleats, no internal divider, just a long A-line cut with an asymmetric hem that opens slightly toward the front. It reads more like a contemporary midi skirt than a ceremonial garment, but the lineage stays visible — the volume, the fall, the way it moves on the body. It's the most pared-back piece in the line.
The cut is high-waisted with a wide elastic band, sitting just below the natural waist for comfort. The hem falls to mid-calf, slightly longer at the back, slightly shorter at the front — the kind of asymmetry old Japanese textile dyers used to balance volume against movement. The fabric is a cotton-blend weave with a natural matte finish, breathable in summer and layerable in cooler months. Sizes run M, L, XL and XXL; the silhouette stays loose at the hem, fitted at the waist.
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 black tee tucked in and white trainers for a clean Daikanyama feel, or with a fitted knit and ankle boots when the weather turns. It pairs as easily with a slip top for evening as it does with a denim jacket for weekend errands. The beige is the kind of neutral that lets every other piece in the wardrobe do its work — closer to raw linen than to khaki, closer to a tatami mat than to sand.










