Street Style in Tokyo: “Harajuku Is Like a Fashion Gallery With a Free Entrance”

Street Style in Tokyo “Harajuku Is Like a Fashion Gallery With a Free Entrance”

Fashion is self-expression. It’s one of the reasons why we love to people-watch, and one of the reasons why street style has become one of the defining photographic genres of our time. Few things are as inspiring as seeing the way people dress in their everyday lives (just ask Matthieu Blazy, who continually cites “the streets” as inspiration for his celebrated vision at Bottega Veneta).

Which is why we launched a new street style series that looks at what people are wearing in the coolest neighborhoods in countries around the world. In June, we tagged along as the photographer Vivian Kim explored the style of Brooklynites on a sunny day spent between Herbert Von King Park in Bed-Stuy and Fort Greene Park in Fort Greene, and the month before we discovered the surrealist sartorialism of Mexico City. For this installment, we ventured to Tokyo, where photographer and FRUiTS magazine founder Shoichi Aoki documented the style of Harajuku. Here’s what Aoki shared about the district:

“In present-day Harajuku, there are probably more foreigners walking around than there are Japanese people. They used to be watchers of Harajuku fashion, but now they are players; it’s a new movement in the neighborhood. In this story, there are many Chinese and Korean individuals who seem to enjoy and carry forward the Harajuku fashion of the 1990s and 2000s, rather than simply copying it. During that time, the fashion created by the young people in Harajuku’s streets spread throughout Japan; it was a time pre-internet, and FRUiTS, the magazine I launched, played a major role in it. Now, the Harajuku fashion of that era has spread worldwide, and this place has become a holy land for it.”

Describe what you’re wearing: “Colorful! It gives the impression of transforming into something non-human.”
FukayaMomo, 21


Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

Ikoma Yuzuki, 21

Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

“Harajuku is like a fashion gallery with a free entrance LOL”
ViDA, 21


Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

Oragon, 512

Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

“I remodeled the skirt and the leg warmers. I love frogs and fish, so I wore them together!”
xiaqua, 19


Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

Li Yiling, 21

Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

“[I'm wearing] a vintage dress that I fell in love with and a Comme des Garçons bag that I received as a gift from my husband.”
Sara, 22


Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

Shion, 25

Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

“In Japan, there has always been a teaching of 八百万の神​ (Yaoyorozu no Kami) or ‘Eight Million Gods’ - I feel​ ​that people who have some kind of ‘god’ in their hearts​ ​gather in Harajuku.”
Nanae Uehara, 24


Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

“Harajuki is the center of fashion where I can see a wide range of subculture fashions from Fairies to Lolita, Decora, Funk, etc.”
NCG, 21


Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

Kyo, 23

Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

EEVEE, 23

Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

Doi, 20

Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

“Harajuku is the center of subculture fashion and representative of Kawaii culture”
HN


Photographed by Shoichi Aoki

Related Stories from Vogue:

What Are People Wearing In Brooklyn, New York? | Vogue