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Japanese fashion subculture decora is making a comeback – it takes the Hello Kitty cute look to the extreme

  • Decora fashion is a subculture born in the late 1990s that takes Japanese notions of cuteness – think the bows and pastel hues of Hello Kitty – to the extreme
  • By the end of the 2010s, the style had fallen out of fashion. Now it is seeing a resurgence thanks to a new generation of young people who network online

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The rebirth of Harajuku fashion

The rebirth of Harajuku fashion

It was an outfit few could ignore.

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Nico arrived at the Harajuku railway station in Tokyo in Japan dressed in a bright outfit of pinks and blues, her head adorned with a crown of hair slides, bows and hairpins so thick that it hid her two-toned hair, her wrists rattling with thick stacks of multicoloured plastic bracelets.

“I am used to the stares,” says Nico. “But I think it’s scary for people joining us for the first time.”

Nico, age 18, is the founder of Neo-Decora Kai, an event dedicated to decora fashion (from the English word “decoration”), a subculture born in the late 1990s that takes Japanese notions of cuteness – think the bows and pastel hues of Hello Kitty – to the extreme.
Its heavily accessorised looks helped it rise to become what Nico called the “cutting edge of kawaii culture”.
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“Decora fashion … I think that is very much what people think of if I say ‘Harajuku fashion’,” says Jana Katzenberg, a researcher in the Japanology department at the University of Cologne, Germany. “It was very colourful, lots and lots of layers, lots and lots and lots of accessories and everything just done up to the max.”

Three participants of a recent Neo-Decora Kai event in Harajuku, Tokyo. Decora, a fashion subculture that had fallen out of favour by the end of the 2010s, is seeing a resurgence. Photo: Jonathan Vit
Three participants of a recent Neo-Decora Kai event in Harajuku, Tokyo. Decora, a fashion subculture that had fallen out of favour by the end of the 2010s, is seeing a resurgence. Photo: Jonathan Vit
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