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  1. The Shiromuku is the all white ensemble worn primarily for shrine weddings but can also be used for temple weddings. Both the kimono underneath and the overcoat is all white, although some variants have appeared with very small amounts of red, pink or accents of other colors.

  2. Shinto weddings, Shinzen kekkon, Shinzenkekkon (神前結婚, "Marriage before the kami"), began in Japan during the early 20th century, popularized after the marriage of Crown Prince Yoshihito and his bride, Princess Kujo Sadako.

  3. A Shinto wedding is a traditional marriage ceremony that takes place at a Shinto shrine using a Shinto priest in Japan. Bride and Groom are dressed in traditional Japanese wedding attire called the Kimono. The bride is wearing Shiromuku(White kimono) or Iro-uchikake(colored kimono) and Wataboshi(hood) or Tsunokakushi(silk paper hat) on her head.

  4. 30 wrz 2024 · Shiromuku is a traditional Japanese bridal kimono worn by brides during Shinto wedding ceremonies. The word “Shiromuku” means “pure white,” and this outfit symbolizes the bride’s purity and new beginning. Shiromuku consists of: Uchikake: A long, white outer kimono that trails on the ground; Kakeshita: A white under-kimono worn underneath

  5. 24 gru 2020 · At a traditional Japanese wedding, the bride and groom usually wear Japanese wedding kimono. The bride wears a white wedding kimono called “shiromuku” with a white headdress. It symbolizes purity and that the bride will become the color of her husband’s family.

  6. 24 sie 2023 · For many, the first image that comes to mind when picturing the bride in a Shinto wedding is the distinctive all-white kimono called Shiromuku and accompanying white hood, Wataboshi. Shiromuku Kimonos are a true embodiment of Japanese traditional craftsmanship, including dyeing, weaving, and embroidery, even more so when it comes to once-in-a ...

  7. The 88 Temple pilgrimage is an eleven-hundred-year-old, 800 mile-long route that encircles the Japanese island of Shikoku, the smallest of Japan’s four principal islands. The route links the sacred sites associated with the ninth century, Shikoku-born Buddhist monk, Kūkai, who after death became known as Kōbō Daishi (“dharma master ...

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