Yes Yes, SOU · SOU Is Making its Mark on the Kyoto Fashion Scene
Since 2002, the Kyoto-based brand has been revisiting traditional Japanese garments through the addition of colourful motifs.

© SOU · SOU
First things first: SOU · SOU, pronounced soso, means ‘yes yes.’ It’s an interjection regularly used by Japanese people during conversations to show interest in what their interlocutor is saying. It’s a Japanese idiosyncrasy to which the brand, founded in 2002 by Katsuji Wakisaka, Hisanobu Tsujimura, and Takeshi Wakabayashi, wanted to pay homage.
Iconic motifs
SOU · SOU’s creations celebrate the quality of traditional Japanese clothing by adding a modern touch. Its childlike, colourful motifs, emblematic of the brand, are designed in a nod to the beauty of the changing seasons. SOU · SOU offers tabi shoes (with two toe segments like those worn by ninja), kimono, furniture, and even snacks (wagashi) inspired by its graphic universe. Everything is imagined and designed in Japan, particularly in Kyoto.
The brand has achieved global success and has even branched out into French streetwear with the collaboration SOU · SOU / le coq sportif, launched in 2008.
More information on SOU · SOU can be found on the brand’s website.

©SOU · SOU

© SOU · SOU

© SOU · SOU

© SOU · SOU

© SOU · SOU
TRENDING
-
The Tattoos that Marked the Criminals of the Edo Period
Traditional tattoos were strong signifiers; murderers had head tattoos, while theft might result in an arm tattoo.
-
Shizuka Yokomizo, between Exhibitionism and Surveillance
'Dear Stranger' is the story of a troubling relationship between the photographer and the subject, who meet without seeing each other.
-
Queen's First Steps in Japan, by Koh Hasebe
The photographer captured on camera moments during the renowned British group's first visit to Japan, back in 1975.
-
The Analog Club, A Hub for Paris’s Film Photography Community
This hybrid space—part shop, part gallery, part darkroom—invites a more mindful approach to photography, rooted in the physicality of film.
-
Shirow Masamune and the Legacy of ‘Ghost in the Shell’
The first major exhibition sheds light on the elusive artist’s full body of work, from cyberpunk icons to lesser-known creations.