What does the name Yohji mean?

Yōji can be written using different kanji characters and can mean: 洋二, “ocean, second” 洋次, “ocean, next” 洋司, “ocean, rule” 洋治, “ocean, govern”

Where does Yohji Yamamoto live?

Yohji Yamamoto (山本 耀司, Yamamoto Yōji, born 3 October 1943) is a Japanese fashion designer based in Tokyo and Paris.

What is the meaning of yakusoku?

a promise
Noun. 約 やく 束 そく • (yakusoku) a promise quotations ▼ an appointment or social engagement (the meeting itself) a convention; something that is conventional.

How do Japanese read time?

Telling time in Japanese is quite simple and easy to understand. Unlike in English, when expressing time in Japanese, the words which indicate the hour and minute are always added next to the numbers (e.g. 3:12 or three twelve = 時 (3ji) 分 (12fun).

How old is Yohji?

78 years (October 3, 1943)Yohji Yamamoto / Age

What inspired Yohji?

Taking his inspiration from menswear, his womenswear collections consist of big, oversized silhouettes, marked by almost solely being black, draping and geometrical shapes. When he first showed his collections outside of Japan, in 1981 at Paris Fashion Week, the audience’s reaction was mixed.

What is Yoji in Japanese?

matter, thing, fact, business, reason, possibly.

Who created Y-3?

Yohji Yamamoto
adidas Y3 Clothing & Shoes What is Y-3? Yohji Yamamoto is the brilliant designer behind Y-3 clothing and the collection’s striking style statement.

What does kanji mean in Japanese?

Kanji. Kanji is a form of the Japanese writing taken from the Chinese characters. Each kanji represents an idea, such as an object, thing or quality.

Who is Yohji Yamamoto?

Yohji Yamamoto maintains a fascination for couturières like Madeleine Vionnet (who he quoted in his SS 1992 collection) and Mademoiselle Chanel (SS 1997). His talent for construction and deconstruction is such that the homages he paid them were brilliant.

What was Yohji Yamamoto’s ‘83 style?

For the FW 1982-83 season, Yohji Yamamoto cultivated his provocations and limited them to cleverly ripped cottons out of which ample, gathered clothes were cut. Holes suddenly looked like ornaments. Is not lace made of filled and empty space? ‘After astonishment comes the time for reflection and seduction’: 1983 was the year of the Japanese.

What is Yohji Yamamoto’s fin de siècle?

From this collection (unofficially called ‘fin de siècle’ because it pays homage to the final years of the nineteenth century) to the SS 1999 show that featured bridal gowns transformed into graceful day dresses, Yohji Yamamoto refined and expressed what is most subtle in himself.