Men's Yukata Blue 'Tamahari'
Cobalt Lines, Floating Spheres, Summer in a Single Garment
There is something almost scientific about the 'Tamahari' — and something deeply poetic at the same time. Across a vivid cobalt blue ground, fine white lines streak diagonally and vertically like rain caught in motion, while pale spheres drift between them, suspended on invisible threads, orbiting nothing and everything at once. It is a pattern that could belong to a Japanese festival print from the Meiji era, or to a contemporary art installation. It belongs to both.
The interplay between the rigid geometry of the lines and the soft roundness of the spheres creates a visual rhythm that is impossible to ignore — structured yet playful, precise yet free. As the wide sleeves move, the diagonal lines shift direction and the spheres seem to float independently, giving the garment a kinetic quality rare in traditional dress.
Cobalt blue has been the colour of Japanese summer for centuries — the colour of asa-gasuri festival yukata, of indigo-dyed cotton drying in the heat, of lanterns reflected in still water. The 'Tamahari' carries all of that history in a thoroughly modern composition.
Finished with a deep burgundy obi that anchors the cool blue with warmth, this is the yukata for a summer festival, a rooftop evening, or any moment that deserves to be memorable.
| Size | Chest | Length | Height | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | 122 cm | 140 cm | 167–176 cm | 55–75 kg |
| L | 128 cm | 145 cm | 177–184 cm | 70–90 kg |
| XL | 132 cm | 150 cm | 184–195 cm | 80–100 kg |
Original: $185.00
-65%$185.00
$64.75

Description
Cobalt Lines, Floating Spheres, Summer in a Single Garment
There is something almost scientific about the 'Tamahari' — and something deeply poetic at the same time. Across a vivid cobalt blue ground, fine white lines streak diagonally and vertically like rain caught in motion, while pale spheres drift between them, suspended on invisible threads, orbiting nothing and everything at once. It is a pattern that could belong to a Japanese festival print from the Meiji era, or to a contemporary art installation. It belongs to both.
The interplay between the rigid geometry of the lines and the soft roundness of the spheres creates a visual rhythm that is impossible to ignore — structured yet playful, precise yet free. As the wide sleeves move, the diagonal lines shift direction and the spheres seem to float independently, giving the garment a kinetic quality rare in traditional dress.
Cobalt blue has been the colour of Japanese summer for centuries — the colour of asa-gasuri festival yukata, of indigo-dyed cotton drying in the heat, of lanterns reflected in still water. The 'Tamahari' carries all of that history in a thoroughly modern composition.
Finished with a deep burgundy obi that anchors the cool blue with warmth, this is the yukata for a summer festival, a rooftop evening, or any moment that deserves to be memorable.
| Size | Chest | Length | Height | Weight |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| M | 122 cm | 140 cm | 167–176 cm | 55–75 kg |
| L | 128 cm | 145 cm | 177–184 cm | 70–90 kg |
| XL | 132 cm | 150 cm | 184–195 cm | 80–100 kg |



















