White Crane Short Satin Robe 'Yukizuru'
White Crane Short Satin Robe with Blue Tsuru and Crisp Cool Tones
Yukizuru means snow crane — the white-on-white field broken only by the bird itself. The robe runs in clean white satin, with blue-shaded tsuru drifting upward across the body, wings fully spread. The blue picks up the colour from old porcelain — sometsuke ware, the cobalt-on-white that ran through Edo-era ceramics. In old Japanese symbolism the crane stands for long life and faithful return. Here the figures stay almost transparent, the way ink drawings hold a subject with a few quiet strokes. It's the lightest piece in the short crane 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 above the knee, made for warmer rooms and warmer afternoons. 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 short 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 white linen shorts and a tank, or tied tight as a dress with bare legs and sandals. It pairs with leather slides, with worn-in trainers, with bare feet on cool tiles. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the early-summer side — first warm light, open windows, slow weekends. Free standard delivery.
Original: $45.00
-65%$45.00
$15.75
Description
White Crane Short Satin Robe with Blue Tsuru and Crisp Cool Tones
Yukizuru means snow crane — the white-on-white field broken only by the bird itself. The robe runs in clean white satin, with blue-shaded tsuru drifting upward across the body, wings fully spread. The blue picks up the colour from old porcelain — sometsuke ware, the cobalt-on-white that ran through Edo-era ceramics. In old Japanese symbolism the crane stands for long life and faithful return. Here the figures stay almost transparent, the way ink drawings hold a subject with a few quiet strokes. It's the lightest piece in the short crane 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 above the knee, made for warmer rooms and warmer afternoons. 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 short 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 white linen shorts and a tank, or tied tight as a dress with bare legs and sandals. It pairs with leather slides, with worn-in trainers, with bare feet on cool tiles. There are two Japans in every wardrobe; this one leans toward the early-summer side — first warm light, open windows, slow weekends. Free standard delivery.











