1. TOZAOU 通販
  2. TOZAOU 通販
  3. TOZAOU 通販
  4. TOZAOU 通販
  5. TOZAOU 通販
  6. TOZAOU 通販

TOZAOU "Royere Jacket"

Regular price ¥79,200
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TOZAOU

*The outer fabric is made of 2/72 worsted wool and 30D nylon hybrid twill warp, with a natural washer shape that takes advantage of the shrinkage of wool and nylon.
The lining is made of a smooth material made from Lenzing's ethical rayon and organic cotton.
Its distinctive features include a roof flap, three-dimensional pockets and a curved hood.
It all started when we discovered a sense of empathy and similarity between the thinking that can be read into the work of mid-century furniture designer Jean Royale and the core thinking of TOZAOU.
Before I started the brand, I was taken to a concrete factory where a friend of mine worked.
When we entered the factory, a world of silvery white spread out before us.
The space was created when fine concrete splattered when unhardened concrete mixed with mortar and gravel was cleaned with a high-pressure washer.
Inside was a partition curtain that had a wet texture.
When I touched it, the wavy curtain was solidified.
I felt betrayed by the feel of the material, something I could imagine based on its physical state, and I realized that this strange and mysterious sensation was actually quite pleasant.
The interiors created by Jean Royere GA also have organic forms that create a pleasant sense of incongruity against the many intuitive lines within the space.
The design is based on the first outerwear (baby clothes) that a human wears after being born.

<size>
Medium size
Sleeve length: 90cm / Width: 66cm / Length: 67cm

<material>
Outer: 86% wool / 14% polyamide
Lining: 70% rayon / 30% cotton


TOZAOU Designer : Mr. Uori

TOZAOU is a menswear brand from Osaka. Based on the concept of " clothing that betrays the frame of reference people have , " TOZAOU proposes humorous men's clothing by taking the small, unconscious things that make up human life as design sources and inserting suits and workwear that reflect the era and background into the context. Paying respect to Japanese craftsmanship, the designer himself places himself in a traditional tailoring field and is involved in everything from material development, pattern making, and sewing, carefully considering what clothes affect people's emotions and what kind of gestures and actions they will be able to express, and creating clothes that connect people to each other.