THE JOURNAL

A trip to Japan can be a lesson in humility. You may think that what you’re wearing is considered. Well put together, even. Then, as you saunter through the streets of Tokyo, you encounter a workman. Just a random guy, fixing a rare pothole in the road. And you come to the realisation that his outfit is considerably more put together than yours.
The secret to Japanese style is in part cultural. Getting dressed is just another facet of a wider set of philosophies. From a deep-seated appreciation for traditional methods of manufacture and craftsmanship to mono no aware, the inherent recognition for material items and how they change over time. Much of this can be studied or taught, but some is ingrained. There is no substitute for growing up fully immersed in it.
Another entry point is those material items themselves. In the case of the way the Japanese dress, this means pieces of clothing that are conceptualised and constructed here. Which brings us to our new Made In Japan edit. We’ve amassed 19 brands that best capture Japanese style today.
Like the country itself, tradition and cutting-edge technology are not mutually exclusive. They rub up against, and often inform, each other. Across the collections, there are shared values, such as attention to detail. And for students of Japan’s secret sauce, poring over these can provide clues. More than anything, though, there is beauty in diversity. These labels share a provenance, but they all end up in very different places.
Below is an introduction to the designers that caught our eye and whom we’ve brought together so they can help you look and feel more put together.
01. FULLCOUNT

Founded in Osaka in 1993 and part of the pioneering “Osaka Five” denim brands, FULLCOUNT has spent more than 30 years doing one thing exceptionally well: jeans. Selvedge fabric, vintage shuttle looms, natural indigo dyes – in short, all the details that matter. Each pair is built to last and designed to age in ways that are entirely your own, fading where you wear them, and softening where you need them to.
Key item: highlights include the classic 1101 models and the Type 2 jackets.
02. OrSlow


The clue is in the name. “Or” for original and “Slow” for, well, slow. Founded in 2005 by Ichiro Nakatsu, OrSlow has rightfully earnt a reputation for producing simple, impeccably made clothes using Japanese fabrics and machinery, drawing from its founder’s encyclopaedic knowledge of all things vintage. There are military jackets and 1950s-style coveralls, painter trousers and some of the best denim that money can buy, all made to be worn in and worn slowly.
Key item: you can’t go wrong with the Super Dad’s jeans, a wide-cut selvedge style made from 13oz Japanese denim on original shuttle looms.
03. Kaptain Sunshine


Not just a dependable name for that sweet spot in crisp smart-casual clothing, Kaptain Sunshine is an inspiration for anyone thinking about a career pivot. In a previous professional life, its founder and designer, Shinsuke Kojima, was a magazine editor. Since 2013, he’s overseen one of the most considered labels to have come out of Tokyo (no small feat, then). The brand itself turns vintage American military and workwear influences into highly wearable and meticulously constructed pieces. The new capsule collection is exclusive to MR PORTER.
Key item: the silk-gabardine blouson (which you’ll only find here) deftly demonstrates the forward-thinking fabrics that have become this brand’s marker.
04. Porter-Yoshida and Co

A bag is about more than the personal effects that you cart around with you; it’s also about how you carry yourself. Launched in 1962 as the baggage line of the accessories manufacturer Yoshida and Co, Porter Yoshida Kaban became known for its impeccable standards of design and construction. It has since become the It-bag of the moment, only with the pedigree and timeless appeal to last a lot longer.
Key item: the Tanker in briefcase form is the modern take on your office bag.
05. Neighborhood


“I wear Neighborhood jeans 365 days a year,” Shinsuke Takizawa told us a decade ago, which should indicate both the focus of the brand he founded in 1994 and the durability and versatility of its denim. A longstanding pillar of Japanese streetwear, the Tokyo label taps into punk and motorcycle subcultures, with distinctive, defiant logos and splatters of paint.
Key item: the logo tees (always black) say it with their chest, but the leather sports jacket is perhaps the cleanest reframing of moto-racer style.
06. KAPITAL


The name refers to Kojima, Okayama, Japan’s “denim capital”. Yet, as good as they are, there is more to KAPITAL than its jeans. Founded in 1985, the brand applies traditional textile methods, handicrafts and patchworking to workwear and Americana. Reverent irreverence might be the best way to frame its output. As well as distressed details and hippie silhouettes, keep your eyes peeled for calling cards such as wacky branding, bandana prints and cheeky smiley badges.
Key item: from flared jeans to Frank Ocean-endorsed socks, everything here could be called cult, but the quilted shell gilet has taken on a life of its own.
07. Human Made


Blending the worlds of streetwear, workwear and Americana under the mantra “the future is in the past”, Human Made is a look inside the mind and mood board of NIGO, the design icon who has become a custodian of Japanese style and influence over the years (read more about him here). Not afraid of a logo or two, the clothes are colourful and bold. But there’s plenty of subtlety, too, found in matching selvedge-denim sets, pleated cotton trousers and twill work shirts.
Key item: a cotton sweatshirt featuring a small logo or a pithy message.
08. Sacai

Chitose Abe’s Sacai is built on the idea of hybrid construction. Two garments becoming one, opposing fabrics sitting side by side; deconstruction to create something new that somehow feels natural. See: a denim jacket with nylon panels, a shell jacket with utilitarian pockets in cotton (part of its ongoing collaboration with Carhartt WIP), or smart trousers with a double denim waistband. Nothing is quite what it seems, and that’s exactly the point for one of the most interesting Japanese brands going today.
Key item: the collab with Carhartt WIP sees the US brand’s iconic contrast-collar jacket reimagined.
09. Auralee


A menswear darling for good reason. Few other brands are working with colour and fabric with as much care and imagination as Auralee. In fact, you can trace plenty of recent tonal trends – khaki green, Klein blue, butter yellow and pops of vibrant red – back to Ryota Iwai’s label, which he started in 2015 and has been quietly growing in influence ever since. While plenty of Japanese designers explore the avant-garde, Auralee is happy to make the definitive version of your favourite staple, often in a colour that no one else can quite match.
Key item: a silk-blend or loose-fitting poplin shirt with some colour in the mix.
10. ATON


The name means “A to N”, referring to the beginning and the end of the traditional gojūon ordering system. Which makes this brand, by extension, the first and last word in menswear essentials. Launched in 2016, the founder Yasuharu Kuzaki has sought to refine what we might consider wardrobe basics until they are very much no longer basic. ATON is the go-to for understated pieces made from premium fabrics, such as washed cashmere, Techno wool and Suvin cotton.
Key item: a Harrington jacket crafted from alpaca presents an unexpected twist on a classic.
11. visvim

The worlds of Ivy, vintage and workwear are well-represented in Japanese design, but visvim takes a weirder, more folksy approach. Since 2000, Hiroki Nakamura has deployed mind-bending designs that take on Native American fabrics, ancient Japanese mud-dyeing and weaving techniques, leopard-print tailoring, frayed leather and military-grad Cordura nylon. (It helps that he spent time living in Alaska during his younger years.) The result is eclectic and a bit mad, futuristic and atavistic, but with a core appreciation for quality and craft.
Key item: the Christo Shaman folk suede slides, which are as brilliantly strange as they sound.
12. Beams Plus

The release of the Take Ivy book in 1965 is often credited with the emergence of preppy style in Japan. But the 1976 launch of the first Beams store in Harajuku did much to sustain interest in the look. The arrival of the sublime Beams Plus saw an elevated approach to mid-century menswear, focusing on high-end materials and fabrications. It also broadened its influences into military and workwear silhouettes.
Key item: the cotton-corduroy blazer in a chestnut brown is like a Wes Anderson reinterpretation of Ivy League style.
13. A.PRESSE


Tokyo-based A.PRESSE launched in 2021 and in just five years, it’s already earnt a devoted following in menswear circles. The label specialises in pieces that look as though they’ve been lived in – and loved – for years. Vintage-inspired cuts, softened fabrics, the kind of relaxed tailoring that feels effortless without being lazy. Its coach jackets, everyday shirting, faded jerseys and softly structured trousers are pieces you can easily build a wardrobe around.
Key item: its straight-leg pleated cashmere trousers will provide the structural support for a superlative look.
14. PROLETA RE ART


Back in 2021, brand founder PROT started listing reworked vintage pieces on online auction sites. From three or four listings a week, the commissions haven’t stopped, finding their way to the likes of A$AP Rocky and Kendrick Lamar. Take a good look at any PROLETA RE ART piece, and you can see why. They’re all stitched, embroidered, distressed and dyed by hand by just two people in a small atelier using traditional Japanese boro techniques, vintage processing and artisanal craftsmanship.
Key piece: the embellished denim jacket is entirely unique (and exclusive to MR PORTER).
15. Remi Relief

Founded by Yutaka Goto in 2008, Remi Relief is centred around the idea of “remixing and innovating” old ideas and “relieving” garments of unnecessary excess details. Drawing on California skate and surf culture of the 1960s and 1970s, the brand’s Kojima factory produces T-shirts, aloha shirts and casual wear that feel comfortably lived in, even from the first wear.
Key item: with a nod to the recently re-released anime classic Akira, Remi Relief’s distressed Akiramete hoodie translates as “to give up”, yet is effortlessly cool.
16. Blue Blue Japan


If you’re going to pick a colour to dedicate an entire ethos to, then blue isn’t a bad choice. Yes, there are some shades of ecru, and even black from time to time, but Blue Blue Japan does what it says on the tin. With 30 years of experience, it has mastered the intricacies of a staple colour. Through a technique called aizome, highly skilled artisans create vivid shades of indigo that shift with every wash and wear, alongside uniquely textured fabrics such as sashiko, a traditional form of delicate embroidery.
Key item: A rich, indigo-dyed suit in sashiko cotton.
17. WTAPS

WTAPS has been quietly influencing the streetwear scene since Tetsu Nishiyama founded the brand in 1996. Drawing from military garb, workwear and youth subcultures, the Tokyo label produces pieces that feel utilitarian without trying too hard. Think functional details, considered fabrics and an impressive collaboration roster that includes anyone from UNDERCOVER and Hoka to Supreme, New Balance and Salehe Bembury.
Key item: the padded fleece-trimmed shell jacket takes the flight jacket and runs with it.
18. Sato


Fukui is a sleepy, scenic Japanese prefecture with a long and storied history of eyewear production – the Champagne region of shades, if you will. Working with master craftsmen in the area, Sato has become one of the leading names in high-end eyewear, utilising pure titanium, natural acetate and limited runs to create frames that are built to withstand time and trends.
Key item: the Hadar-T sunglasses in pure Japanese titanium.
19. ssstein


On the more muted side of things, ssstein is the sort of label that you could dip into for the entirety of your wardrobe, from work to weekend and everything in between. It’s been around, quietly, since 2016, with a deserved level of interest appearing more recently. Founder Kiichiro Asakawa summarises his approach as clothes that are “easy to throw on without feeling like you’re trying too hard”.
Key item: the classic leather jacket is a piece that can be rotated into your wardrobe forever.