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Japanese women bust out
By Amy Chozick
May 16, 2007

Pop artist Kumi Koda in 'barely there' lingerie ads |
Tokyo - All over Japan, retailers are scrambling to keep up with a new look
known as "bon-kyu-bon." It means "big-small-big" and it signals a change in the
way Japanese women look: they're getting curvier.
Japanese stores that used to keep just two or three sizes of clothing on hand
are rushing to stock larger sizes. Juicy Couture, known for its figure-hugging
terrycloth tracksuits, opened one of its biggest stores in Tokyo last year. And
Tokyo's high-end Isetan department store, which used to relegate its bigger
sizes to one corner, now prominently features larger items from designers such
as Ralph Lauren, Diane von Furstenberg and DKNY.
Wacoal Corp., Japan's largest lingerie company, was once known for its
super-padded brassieres. Now the company has a new best-seller: the "Love Bra,"
a cleavage-boosting creation with less padding, aimed at curvier women in their
20s.
Today, the average Japanese woman's hips, at 35 inches, are around an inch
wider than those of women a generation older. Women in their 20s wear a bra at
least two sizes larger than that of their mothers, according to Wacoal. Waist
size, meanwhile, has gotten slightly smaller, accentuating many young women's
curves.
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The average 20-year-old is also nearly three inches taller than she was in 1950,
according to government statistics, and the average foot has grown by nearly a
quarter of an inch.
The physical changes are largely the result of an increasingly Westernized
diet, say nutritionists. Meals that used to consist of mostly fish, vegetables
and tofu now lean heavily toward an American-style menu of red meat, dairy and
indulgences such as Krispy Kreme doughnuts and Cold Stone Creamery ice cream.
All this extra protein and calcium has led to longer, stronger and fuller
bodies. Shinichi Tashiro, an endocrinology professor at Showa Pharmaceutical
University, says the intake of extra fat tends to go to either breasts or hips
in adolescent girls.
Marketers say they first started noticing more women with hourglass figures a
few years ago. One of the first people to act on the change was apparel
wholesaler Kazuya Kito.
In 2001, Kito founded Egoist, a trendy purveyor of slinky clothing designed to
highlight the busty look, figuring that the curvier bodies would make women
want to wear less-modest outfits. His fashion industry friends scoffed at the
idea. Back then, micro-mini skirts were in style but women, for the most part,
kept their chests covered. Yet Egoist, whose wares include see-through sweaters
made to show off decorative bras or skinny tube tops, became a huge hit and a
catalyst for other skimpy-clothing brands.

Pop artist Kumi Koda in 'barely there' lingerie ads |
Nami Sakamoto, an advertising-agency employee, embodies the new look. The
26-year-old is tall - by Japanese standards - at 5 feet 5 inches. She's also
voluptuous, with a 35-inch bust and 35-inch hips.
"I had a hard time finding button-down shirts that would close," says Sakamoto,
especially when she was in high school and there were fewer foreign retailers
in Japan that actually sold bigger sizes.
"Sometimes the buttons would burst off." Now she buys clothes at Western
retailers that carry larger sizes.
Other young women are buying special items to flaunt their new physique. "It's
just more fun to show some skin," says Ayami Arii, a 19-year-old vocational
school student, who recently sported a tiny denim mini skirt and an iridescent
push-up bra that peeks out from below her low-cut blouse. Her bra, a big seller
at boutiques in Tokyo's Shibuya 109 department store, is called a "Showy Bra."
Similar to a string bikini top, the $60 bras, made to be peeking out of a
low-cut blouse, started appearing last year and come in a variety of colours,
from red patent leather to leopard print and orange sequins.
The cleavage craze took off in 2003, when a young pop star named Kumi Koda
appeared in ads around Tokyo wearing a barely-there metallic bra and not much
else. In one image, she wore coconut shells over her chest. Then, two years
later, she performed at the televised Japan Record Awards wearing thin
tape-like gold satin straps over her breasts that revealed nearly everything
when she danced. The 24-year-old star has become the champion of a new "If
you've got it, flaunt it" attitude among young Japanese women.
The Wall Street Journal
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©
2005 Asian Sex Gazette.
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