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Between 30 and 100 days after a child is born, the parents, siblings, and grandparents visit a shrine together to report the child's birth. The baby is dressed in a white under-kimono. On top of that kimono, the baby wears a brightly colored yuzen-dyed kimono if it is a girl, and a black kimono decorated with the family crest if it is a boy.
At the age of 20, young people celebrate their passage into adulthood by visiting a shrine on Coming-of-Age Day, the second Monday in January. For this occasion, girls wear furisode (kimonos with long flowing sleeves) and boys wear haori (half-coats) and hakama decorated with their family crests. Furisode kimonos are worn only by unmarried women. Once upon a time, young Japanese women declared their love for a man by fluttering the long-flapped sleeves of their furisode kimono. At weddings, the bride wears a pure white kimono known as a shiromuku. The color white signifies the beginning of a journey.
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Photos (from top): Children wear kimonos for the Shichi-Go-San Festival (courtesy of Hisako Nakatani ); a furisode kimono, worn only by unmarrid women (© Yoshiaki Yamamoto); Many women wear kimonos for their first visit to a temple or shrine in the new year.(courtesy of Hisako Nakatani) |