Gold Peacock Long Satin Robe 'Kinshou'
Gold Peacock Long Satin Robe with Sakura, Peonies and Warm Sheen
Kinshou pulls its name from kogane — the old word for gold leaf used on byobu screens and obi sashes for centuries. The robe holds that lineage. A warm gold satin runs across the body, with peacocks unfolding their tails through pink peonies and scattered cherry blossoms. The composition borrows from the kacho-ga tradition, where birds and flowers share the same plane. Gold is a difficult ground — too bright and it tips into costume. Here the tone stays warm rather than metallic, the print stays close enough that the eye reads pattern before noise. It's the warmest piece in the peacock line.
The cut follows the traditional silhouette: wide three-quarter sleeves, a deep V-collar, a wrap front tied at the waist with the included satin belt. The length falls to mid-calf, somewhere between robe and dress, made to be belted loose or pulled tight. The fabric is polyester satin — fluid, smooth against the skin, holding its drape rather than clinging to it. Seams are reinforced for daily wear. The cut runs slim, and a size up gives more room for layering or a fuller shape.
You get the kimono robe and its matching satin belt. The print holds its tone through regular wear and gentle hand-washing. No costume packaging, no plastic accessory clutter — just the garment, ready to be folded into your wardrobe alongside everything else you actually wear.
Wear it open over a cream slip dress for a quiet evening, or tied tight over black trousers and a fitted top when the gold does the work. It pairs with bare feet on wood floors, with leather sandals, with low boots in cooler weather. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the ceremonial side — without ever feeling like a costume. Free standard delivery.
Original: $55.00
-65%$55.00
$19.25
Description
Gold Peacock Long Satin Robe with Sakura, Peonies and Warm Sheen
Kinshou pulls its name from kogane — the old word for gold leaf used on byobu screens and obi sashes for centuries. The robe holds that lineage. A warm gold satin runs across the body, with peacocks unfolding their tails through pink peonies and scattered cherry blossoms. The composition borrows from the kacho-ga tradition, where birds and flowers share the same plane. Gold is a difficult ground — too bright and it tips into costume. Here the tone stays warm rather than metallic, the print stays close enough that the eye reads pattern before noise. It's the warmest piece in the peacock line.
The cut follows the traditional silhouette: wide three-quarter sleeves, a deep V-collar, a wrap front tied at the waist with the included satin belt. The length falls to mid-calf, somewhere between robe and dress, made to be belted loose or pulled tight. The fabric is polyester satin — fluid, smooth against the skin, holding its drape rather than clinging to it. Seams are reinforced for daily wear. The cut runs slim, and a size up gives more room for layering or a fuller shape.
You get the kimono robe and its matching satin belt. The print holds its tone through regular wear and gentle hand-washing. No costume packaging, no plastic accessory clutter — just the garment, ready to be folded into your wardrobe alongside everything else you actually wear.
Wear it open over a cream slip dress for a quiet evening, or tied tight over black trousers and a fitted top when the gold does the work. It pairs with bare feet on wood floors, with leather sandals, with low boots in cooler weather. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the ceremonial side — without ever feeling like a costume. Free standard delivery.











