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branchandroot: blowing dandelion (dandelion blowing)
It's easy enough for a westerner looking around at kimono to find sites and pictures of (upper class) kimono styles and (upper class) kimono fabrics and accounts of (upper class) kimono layers and how to tie an (upper class) obi. All of these center around the "formal" kimono, which restricts movement, eating, and possible activities in a way no sane person would accept day-to-day without some huge compensation. (I did mention the "upper class" thing, yes?)

What's harder is finding anything at all about what normal people wore )
branchandroot: white chrysanthemum on black (chrysanthemum-stark)
This would be easier if it was narrative.

Wrestling with how to translate mindful worldbuilding into fabric )

Of course, most of this is going to be completely invisible to anyone who has not also done a fair amount of digging around after fashion and clothing styles in relation to class and gender and this time period. Perhaps I'll print up a small broadside (or, more handily, a chapbook) to hand out to anyone who asks. And, of course, I expect to give any passing Kimono Police the screaming fits, which I consider a nice little bonus.
branchandroot: Shio, character for salt (salt)
So, I'm at Marcon. There's a lot of steampunk this year (indeed, I yearn for a hat but have restrained myself thus far in light of my art bidding). And I've discovered that the theme for this year's Ohayocon will be steampunk.

This led, as such things do, to lamentations on the fact that steampunk is so direly Euro-centric and how much fun it would be to do actual Japanese steampunk.

Not, I pause to add, here, Victorientalism, which appears to consist primarily of the utterly, utterly clueless drive to reify the Orientalism of 19th C European authors who had never actually been in sniffing distance of any Asian country and merely used the specter thereof as a screen on which to project the results of dredging their own ids. *pauses to go find something to settle her nausea* Nor am I thinking of FMA and Castle in the Sky, which are explicitly set in Europe or Europe-analogues.

No, what I'm thinking of is more along the lines of what one aspiring author has dubbed steampanku: a re-imagining of Japanese history, especially late Edo and Meiji, with the addition of 'steam' and clockwork based technologies. See also, Samurai Seven, only a good deal more optimistic and less constrained by the urge to Extreme Pathos. More cheerful erasure of gender inequality as per speculative fiction that wants to make a point. Steam mecha. Air ships to navigate about the interior. The energy that was plowed into social containment mechanisms being let to run instead into technological advance (cue the steam arms-race, cue science as a method of social advancement and class laundering, cue the re-opening of the country being because Perry brought a rich bribe of favorable trade deals for coal [or handwavium, as steampunk really has zero history of technologically or economically sound underpinnings]).

I mean, seriously, Meiji practically is steampunk already, especially in terms of social ferment, the search for new modes of existence, the drive for modernization, and the value placed on "advancement". The fact that these things led to some very problematic moments both domestically and abroad is, itself, very in line with the sociopolitical critique at the roots of steampunk (not that you'd know it to look at these days...).

So, I envision, in broad strokes, the persona of an imported consultant during Meiji (since I'm leery of taking on a Japanese persona) who adopted, as some did, a certain amount of local dress. In costume terms, I think this would come out to a hip-length kimono on top (local, as I'm postulating shorter styles for tech class), full pants below (equally comfortable to those used to bloomers or hakama, suitable to tech class), sandals or low boots (since they would have to be removable reasonably easily; boots seem most appropriate to a Westerner persona, though) and a leather obi with suitable compartments, hangers, brass, whatever seems appropriate (also local style for techs). Possibly a watch-cuff, because they're cool.

What do you guys think?

ETA: Oo, of course, the striped kimono! Good, quiet middle class pattern and fabric (bonus that existing steampunk aesthetics lean heavily to stripes), and those odd sleeves that are a bit too long for a married woman but way too short for a girl having her come-out; perfect for a mature but unmarried tech chick.

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