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Mastering the Art of the Kimono -

The BBC's Japan Correspondent Roland Buerk reports on efforts being made to revive the popularity of traditional hand-crafted kimonos and ensure ancient skills are not lost.

The kimono may be one of Japan's most enduring cultural symbols, but the kimono industry is now in steep decline, and soon there could be no craftsmen left with the skills to make them.

Younger Japanese prefer Western clothes to eye-wateringly expensive and impractical traditional kimonos. As kimonos have gone out of fashion, the number of companies making them has also plummeted.

There can be a thousand processes or more involved in making one kimono, each carried out specialist craftsmen. It takes years to master a single technique, but most craftsmen today are over 80 and within the next 10 years, many will pass away. Can the kimono survive?

The BBC's Japan Correspondent Roland Buerk reports on the crisis in the industry, and the efforts being made to ensure ancient skills are not lost.

Producer: Ruth Evans A Ruth Evans production for BBC Radio 4.

  • Broadcast on BBC Radio 4, 11:00AM Wed, 23 Nov 2011
  • Available until 12:00AM Thu, 1 Jan 2099
  • First broadcast BBC Radio 4, 11:00AM Wed, 23 Nov 2011
  • Categories
  • Duration 30 minutes

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