Bbc Handmade In Japan Series 1 2of3 The Kimono ... [2K 720p]
Unlike the high-gloss travelogues that reduce Japanese culture to clichés, this episode—presented by bespoke tailor and enthusiast James Fox—dives deep into the dye vats and dusty looms of a dying art. It is not simply a film about clothing; it is an elegy for a craft that once defined the Japanese spirit. The documentary opens not in a Tokyo boutique, but in the quiet, shadowed interior of a Kyoto workshop. Here, Fox strips away the Western misconception of the kimono as merely a "robe." Instead, we see it for what it truly is: a feat of engineering.
In an era of fast fashion and disposable trends, the BBC documentary series Handmade in Japan offers a meditative escape. Nowhere is this more poignant than in Series 1, Episode 2: The Kimono . BBC Handmade in Japan Series 1 2of3 The Kimono ...
Yet, the tone shifts when the master admits that he has no apprentice. "Young people," he says through a translator, "see the kimono as a coffin. They wear Western clothes to work, Western clothes to party. The kimono is for weddings and funerals only." Here, Fox strips away the Western misconception of
"I am not saving the tradition," the designer admits. "I am mutating it. If it does not change, it will die." Yet, the tone shifts when the master admits
Handmade in Japan: The Kimono is a masterclass in television storytelling. It asks a difficult question: What do we lose when a garment that took six months to make is replaced by a $10 polyester shirt? By the final frame—a slow zoom out on a master dyer working alone in his silent studio—the answer feels devastatingly clear.