2025年12月21日日曜日

I walked around New York for 1 minute.

■ I walked around New York for 1 minute.


I feel depressed when I come to New York.

Going from Tokyo to Paris and then to New York feels like a decline for me.

Police sirens and horns were blaring nonstop.

A meal of grilled minced meat dipped in ketchup and washed down with sweet sauce.

I had no choice but to go into Ootoya and muttered how expensive it was.

It's good that there's MOMA.

They say New York is a melting pot of races, but it actually seems quite uniform.

Coming from Paris.

There were people with hijabs, Middle Easterners, Africans, and all sorts of outfits, and I blended in wearing a haori and hakama, but since New York fashion is the norm, I stood out and people called out to me, "I love your kimono." Leave me alone.

I came here for work, a job that requires me to walk around in a haori and hakama.

New York Fashion Week.

It's a job that only requires a one-minute walk.

Wearing the kataginu (shoulder garment) used in Kyogen (and everything else, from hat to shoes, is his own, which is revolutionary!), he walked back and forth down the runway.

taller than the other models , and her role was to lead them.

This year I had the opportunity to walk around in a kimono twice: once in Kyoto for the Gion Festival and once in New York for Fashion Week.

Sound of Ikebana.

A project by Professor Tosa Naoko of the Kyoto University Disaster Prevention Research Institute.

The fashion pieces are punk art and technology pieces that turn the sounds of babies crying into flower arrangement designs .

This time I'll be parading around as a special professor at Kyoto University.

I hope you understand!


It's been exactly 20 years since New York Fashion Week last took place.

I was working in Kyoto that time too.

fabric to an artist in New York to create a design, and in the end the uchikake that I brought in without any design work was the most popular.

It seems that the Kyoto side had no confidence in the value of Nishijin 's 500-year-old materials, colors, patterns, and designs.

This was two years after 9/11.


911. I got caught up in Manhattan.

The job was at a venture company founded in New York by a female MIT PhD student named Idit Harel .

This is one of the things that makes me feel depressed in New York.

I was 40 years old. I reset my life. It had been 20 years since I returned to Japan from the United States.

Coincidentally, it was September 11th that I walked around New York this time.

Once again, the woman was invited.

I think the goddess smiled on me on this job.


Jet planes in skyscrapers.

It pits cutting-edge 20th century tech against cutting-edge 20th century tech.

That was the beginning of the 21st century.

It was a terrifying yet magnificent piece of design that marked history.

Twenty years have passed. There have been earthquakes, epidemics, and wars.

its pursuit of digital transformation and is sinking.

I feel depressed when I come to New York.


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