kimono$42415$ - definizione. Che cos'è kimono$42415$
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Cosa (chi) è kimono$42415$ - definizione

2005 SHORT FILM
Girlfriend in a kimono

Kimono         
  • kitsuke}} standards for women, which promoted a neater, more standardised appearance.
  • yukata}} decorated with spider chrysanthemums and dragonflies respectively
  • katsugi}} style.
  • Hōmongi}}
  • Iromuji}}
  • cranes]], from the [[Khalili Collection of Kimono]]
  • Kimono for a young woman, depicting a boat on swirling water, with pine tree, plum blossoms and maples. Japan, 1912–1926. From the [[Khalili Collection of Kimono]]
  • [[tanmono]]}}
  • tanmono}}
  • alt=A young woman stood up in a dark blue long-sleeved kimono with a white designs across the lap and the middle of the sleeves. The sash she wears is orange with a thin green belt in the centre
  • komon}} with a small, repeating floral pattern
  • 165x165px
  • kosode}} (left) and a modern-day kimono (right).
  • kurotomesode}} with three crests and longer sleeves.
  • edo komon}} pattern is stencil-dyed onto the fabric.
  • 1800}}; the areas likely to have been damaged are made in another colour. Paper and silk.
  • obi}}, the sleeves, and the style of wearing multiple layered kimono. ([[Utagawa Kuniyoshi]], ''Plum Blossoms at Night'', woodblock print, 19th century)
  • haori}}
  • Couple being married in formal traditional dress
  • Fukuoka City]] Hall
  • kurotomesode}}-type pattern on the kimono's elongated skirt
  • Tsukesage}}
  • tsunokakushi}} (wedding headpiece)
  • irotomesode}} dating to the 1920s displaying a mirrored skirt pattern (the same garment as in the wedding image at the top of the page)
JAPANESE TRADITIONAL GARMENT
Kimonos; Haorri; Kimono-hiyoku layering; Hiyoku; Uchikake; Hōmongi; Obi-ita; 着物; Kimono-hiyoku-layering; Datejime; Homongi; Nagajuban; 👘; Kitsuke; Jinbaori; Kimonon; Nagajubans; Shiromuku
·add. ·noun A similar gown worn as a dressing gown by women of Western nations.
II. Kimono ·add. ·noun A kind of loose robe or gown tied with a sash, worn as an outer garment by Japanese men and women.
kimono         
  • kitsuke}} standards for women, which promoted a neater, more standardised appearance.
  • yukata}} decorated with spider chrysanthemums and dragonflies respectively
  • katsugi}} style.
  • Hōmongi}}
  • Iromuji}}
  • cranes]], from the [[Khalili Collection of Kimono]]
  • Kimono for a young woman, depicting a boat on swirling water, with pine tree, plum blossoms and maples. Japan, 1912–1926. From the [[Khalili Collection of Kimono]]
  • [[tanmono]]}}
  • tanmono}}
  • alt=A young woman stood up in a dark blue long-sleeved kimono with a white designs across the lap and the middle of the sleeves. The sash she wears is orange with a thin green belt in the centre
  • komon}} with a small, repeating floral pattern
  • 165x165px
  • kosode}} (left) and a modern-day kimono (right).
  • kurotomesode}} with three crests and longer sleeves.
  • edo komon}} pattern is stencil-dyed onto the fabric.
  • 1800}}; the areas likely to have been damaged are made in another colour. Paper and silk.
  • obi}}, the sleeves, and the style of wearing multiple layered kimono. ([[Utagawa Kuniyoshi]], ''Plum Blossoms at Night'', woodblock print, 19th century)
  • haori}}
  • Couple being married in formal traditional dress
  • Fukuoka City]] Hall
  • kurotomesode}}-type pattern on the kimono's elongated skirt
  • Tsukesage}}
  • tsunokakushi}} (wedding headpiece)
  • irotomesode}} dating to the 1920s displaying a mirrored skirt pattern (the same garment as in the wedding image at the top of the page)
JAPANESE TRADITIONAL GARMENT
Kimonos; Haorri; Kimono-hiyoku layering; Hiyoku; Uchikake; Hōmongi; Obi-ita; 着物; Kimono-hiyoku-layering; Datejime; Homongi; Nagajuban; 👘; Kitsuke; Jinbaori; Kimonon; Nagajubans; Shiromuku
(kimonos)
A kimono is an item of Japanese clothing. It is long, shaped like a coat, and has wide sleeves.
N-COUNT
kimono         
  • kitsuke}} standards for women, which promoted a neater, more standardised appearance.
  • yukata}} decorated with spider chrysanthemums and dragonflies respectively
  • katsugi}} style.
  • Hōmongi}}
  • Iromuji}}
  • cranes]], from the [[Khalili Collection of Kimono]]
  • Kimono for a young woman, depicting a boat on swirling water, with pine tree, plum blossoms and maples. Japan, 1912–1926. From the [[Khalili Collection of Kimono]]
  • [[tanmono]]}}
  • tanmono}}
  • alt=A young woman stood up in a dark blue long-sleeved kimono with a white designs across the lap and the middle of the sleeves. The sash she wears is orange with a thin green belt in the centre
  • komon}} with a small, repeating floral pattern
  • 165x165px
  • kosode}} (left) and a modern-day kimono (right).
  • kurotomesode}} with three crests and longer sleeves.
  • edo komon}} pattern is stencil-dyed onto the fabric.
  • 1800}}; the areas likely to have been damaged are made in another colour. Paper and silk.
  • obi}}, the sleeves, and the style of wearing multiple layered kimono. ([[Utagawa Kuniyoshi]], ''Plum Blossoms at Night'', woodblock print, 19th century)
  • haori}}
  • Couple being married in formal traditional dress
  • Fukuoka City]] Hall
  • kurotomesode}}-type pattern on the kimono's elongated skirt
  • Tsukesage}}
  • tsunokakushi}} (wedding headpiece)
  • irotomesode}} dating to the 1920s displaying a mirrored skirt pattern (the same garment as in the wedding image at the top of the page)
JAPANESE TRADITIONAL GARMENT
Kimonos; Haorri; Kimono-hiyoku layering; Hiyoku; Uchikake; Hōmongi; Obi-ita; 着物; Kimono-hiyoku-layering; Datejime; Homongi; Nagajuban; 👘; Kitsuke; Jinbaori; Kimonon; Nagajubans; Shiromuku
[k?'m??n??]
¦ noun (plural kimonos) a long, loose robe having wide sleeves and tied with a sash, originally worn as a formal garment in Japan.
Derivatives
kimonoed adjective
Origin
C17: Japanese, from ki 'wearing' + mono 'thing'.

Wikipedia

Girlfriend in a Kimono

Girlfriend in a Kimono is a short film shot in the summer of 2005, written and directed by Dominic Thackray who describes it as an anti-romance. Named after the 1987 song Girlfriend in a Coma by the Smiths, it tells the tale of autoslacker Vincent who falls for French burlesque dancer Candice, and who finds that consensus reality is unable to help him explain her lack of engagement. With most roles played by first-time actors it also features Penny Rimbaud (of Crass) as the enigmatic Rimbaud and Shizuka Hata (of Banzai) in two roles. The film's score is by Hey Is Dee Dee (Ramone) Home producer Ronni Raygun Thomas, and there is additional music from Saint Etienne, Crass and Talulah Gosh. It was produced by former Raindance producer Oli Harbottle and former East End Film Festival producer Rachael Castell.

The film was selected by the British Council in early 2006 for inclusion in their film festivals programme and was shortlisted for awards at the Raindance Film Festival, the Halloween London Short Film Festival and Coney Island Film Festival. Writer-director Thackray worked a succession of low-rent jobs, the last of which as a receptionist in a zero-star hotel on the left bank in Paris in 1995, where he occasionally rented out rooms by the hour. Soon after quitting he embarked upon a degree in graphic design. Since 1999 he has worked for the Raindance Film Festival in London as designer and programmer. Girlfriend in a Kimono was his first film as director.

Some reviews of the film:

'A seductive sense of chaos, anarchy and romance. An original, spirited take on the madness and unpredictability of life in our capital city' Dave Calhoun, Time Out London

'Really funny' Wendy Mitchell, Indiewire

'Smart script and well-paced. This is the short Zach Braff might have made before embarking on Garden State' Adam Watkins, Six Degrees Film

'Penny Rimbaud crops up as a malevolent presence in the groovy mini-fable Girlfriend in a Kimono, a nicely shot and perfectly formed short' Chris Anderson, Plan B magazine