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SHIRO MUKU
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SHIRO MUKU
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About the Shiromuku Wedding Kimono
The shiromuku (白無垢) is the most formal Japanese bridal kimono — a pure white ensemble traditionally worn for Shinto wedding ceremonies. Every layer from the under-robe to the outer overcoat (uchikake), the obi, the headpiece, and the accessories is white, giving the shiromuku its name: shiro (white) + muku (pure, untainted). The garment dates to the Muromachi period (14th–16th century), when samurai-class brides wore all white as a sign of their willingness to “be dyed in the colour of the new family.”
What’s in a shiromuku ensemble?
A full shiromuku is not a single garment but a layered ensemble that takes a professional dresser (kitsuke specialist) 40–60 minutes to assemble. The layers, from the body outward:
- Hadajuban & susoyoke — base undergarments.
- Nagajuban — long underrobe.
- Kakeshita — white inner kimono tied with the obi.
- Maru obi — white woven sash.
- Uchikake — white outer overcoat, worn open and trailing.
- Hakoseko, kaiken, suehiro — symbolic obi accessories.
- Zori — white silk platform sandals.
Wataboshi vs tsunokakushi: which headpiece?
Shiromuku is worn with one of two headpieces:
- Wataboshi — a large white silk hood that frames the bride’s face. Worn only with shiromuku, only during the ceremony. Gives the most iconic, classical silhouette.
- Tsunokakushi — a narrow white silk band wrapped around the hair, leaving the face visible. Compatible with both shiromuku and iro-uchikake. More flexible for portrait composition.
Both options are available at INAI WEDDING WASOU; your stylist will recommend based on the look you want.
Is shiromuku the same as a Japanese wedding dress?
Yes — when international brides search for “Japanese wedding dress” or “Japanese bridal gown,” they are most often describing a shiromuku. It is the Japanese equivalent of a Western white wedding gown: the most formal bridal garment, worn only at a wedding or wedding-related photoshoot. See our Japanese wedding dress guide for the full comparison.
Where to wear a shiromuku for photos
Shiromuku photographs especially well in front of traditional Japanese architecture — temples, shrines, and historic streetscapes. In Tokyo, our preferred locations are around Asakusa: Sensoji temple, Kaminarimon gate, and Nakamise street. See the kimono photoshoot Tokyo guide for a full list.
How much does a shiromuku photoshoot cost?
At INAI WEDDING WASOU, a full shiromuku photoshoot starts at ¥88,000. This includes the kimono rental, all under-layers and accessories, professional kitsuke (dressing), hair styling, photographer, and all edited photos. See full pricing.
Related guides
Wedding kimono guide · Iro-uchikake lineup · Montsuki haori hakama lineup · Tokyo pre-wedding photography guide
