
Overview
YUIMA NAKAZATO is an independent Tokyo fashion house founded in 2009 by Japanese designer Yuima Nakazato. The label followed his award-winning graduation from the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp and developed through experimental womenswear, menswear and custom stage clothing before entering the Paris couture system. YUIMA NAKAZATO Co., Ltd. was incorporated in 2015, while the Fédération de la Haute Couture et de la Mode records 2015 as the house’s year of creation.
Nakazato made his Paris Haute Couture Week debut with UNKNOWN in July 2016 as an official guest designer. The house now appears on the FHCM calendar as a Guest House and remains the only Japanese label presenting there continuously in that category. Its collections combine couture handwork with modular construction, digital fabrication and material research, including the Unit System, TYPE-1 and Biosmocking developed through a long collaboration with Spiber and its Brewed Protein™ fibres.
The studio’s activity extends beyond seasonal presentations. Nakazato designs costumes for opera, ballet and music performance, runs the FASHION FRONTIER PROGRAM for emerging creators, and has been the subject of exhibitions in Tokyo, Calais and Oulu. Recent collections have shifted from foregrounding technical systems towards field research and narrative: discarded clothing in Kenya, the White Desert in Egypt, frozen landscapes in Finland and ancient cedar forests on Yakushima become sources for clothing concerned with protection, fragility and the environmental afterlife of materials.
Philosophy
YUIMA NAKAZATO approaches couture as a system of individual adaptation. The Unit System and TYPE-1 replace fixed seams with modular components, resin bonding and metal fastenings, allowing garments to be altered, repaired or reconfigured around a specific body. This work treats made-to-measure clothing as a design problem that can be expanded through digital tools without reducing the role of handwork.
Material behaviour often determines the final form. Biosmocking uses controlled contraction in Spiber’s Brewed Protein™ textiles to generate three-dimensional surfaces without conventional cutting and sewing. Recycled uniforms, deadstock, fragmented denim, ceramics, glass, chains, parachute fabric and airbags enter the same process. The studio does not present technology as a replacement for craft; software, industrial research, knitting, dyeing, ceramic work and couture assembly operate in sequence.
The collections increasingly begin with travel and observation. Nakazato uses landscapes to test what clothing protects and what it reveals: ice becomes an image of vulnerable armour, desert erosion becomes a model for fading memory, and ceramic pieces reproduce the flow of stones and tree rings. Movement remains central through stage costume and runway choreography, where sound, breakage and bodily motion make the garment’s structure visible.
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Creative timeline
Button TextOulu Art Museum opened GLACIER in May 2026 as part of the Oulu2026 European Capital of Culture programme. The exhibition brings together couture shaped by northern fieldwork, photography and process material, allowing the environmental research behind the runway work to be examined through a sustained museum presentation.
In 2026, work by YUIMA NAKAZATO entered an acquisition and exhibition context connected to Costume Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. The placement extended the house’s museum history beyond monographic surveys and situated its technology-led couture within a broader institutional history of dress and artistic practice.
Tokyo City View marked the house’s fifteenth anniversary with an exhibition bringing couture, stage costume, field research and documentary material into one account of the practice. Its panoramic setting returned the international couture history to Tokyo and connected the atelier’s speculative landscapes to the city in which the company operates.
The Cité de la dentelle et de la mode opened YUIMA NAKAZATO: Beyond Couture in Calais in 2024. The first major monographic museum exhibition devoted to the house presented more than fifty looks alongside process material, technologies and stage work. It established a public institutional record of the atelier’s development since its entry into Paris couture.
From 2023, field research became a recurring part of the house’s design process. Work in Kenya, Egypt, Finland and Japan connected exported clothing waste, landscape, climate and local material knowledge to the atelier’s couture systems. The change broadened sustainability from technical efficiency into an examination of where garments, resources and discarded clothing travel.
Nakazato founded the FASHION FRONTIER PROGRAM in 2021 as an award and educational platform for emerging creators working with social and environmental questions. The programme extended the designer’s research beyond his own studio and created a recurring structure for mentorship, public discussion and new fashion proposals.
In 2020, YUIMA NAKAZATO publicly established Biosmocking as a central construction technology. Digitally applied patterns control the contraction of specially developed Brewed Protein™ textiles in water, producing three-dimensional form without conventional cutting and extensive seaming. The process joined computation, material behaviour and couture fitting in a system that could be adjusted for individual bodies.
By 2019, the long-term partnership with Spiber had become a central material programme for the house. Brewed Protein™ fibres were developed through repeated couture applications, weaving, dyeing and garment trials rather than a single capsule. The collaboration linked biological material research to the atelier’s modular construction and customisation goals.
Around 2019, the atelier developed TYPE-1 as a needle- and thread-free assembly system using resin components and metal clasps. Garments could be built, adjusted and repaired without specialist sewing, translating the Unit System from a couture proposition into a product platform. TYPE-1 remains active through the house’s online store and later couture applications.
In 2018, the house studied clothing as a protective interface through dialogue with JAXA’s spacesuit development team and experiments with recovered parachute, airbag material and Toray’s Ultrasuede® PX. A dedicated exhibition at 21_21 DESIGN SIGHT in Tokyo presented the resulting garments alongside the atelier’s manufacturing system, moving the research beyond the runway into an institutional design context.
Nakazato received the Shiseido Award for Best New Designer of the Year at the 2017 Mainichi Fashion Grand Prix and the WIRED Audi INNOVATION AWARD in 2018. Together, the awards recognised both the fashion practice and its use of technology, placing the young couture house within Japan’s design and innovation institutions.
From 2017, the atelier developed a modular Unit System based on repeated components that could be connected, replaced and recomposed. The system treated a garment as an adaptable structure instead of a fixed shell and became the conceptual basis for Nakazato’s research into individual fit, repair and lower-waste production.
Nakazato entered Paris Haute Couture Week as an official guest designer in July 2016. The appointment gave the Tokyo house a continuing place within the Paris couture schedule while leaving its studio and company in Japan. Recent FHCM calendars classify YUIMA NAKAZATO as a Guest House, distinct from permanent and corresponding members.
YUIMA NAKAZATO Co., Ltd. was incorporated in Tokyo in 2015 with Nakazato as its representative. The company formalised the operating structure behind couture presentations, product systems, performance work and exhibitions. It also explains the distinction between the label’s 2009 foundation and the 2015 creation year recorded by the FHCM.
YUIMA NAKAZATO presented a menswear collection on a Tokyo runway in 2010, extending the young label beyond its initial womenswear identity. Menswear remained integrated into the root house and anticipated later couture work in which tailoring, armour and fragile ornament were developed across gendered bodies.
Yuima Nakazato founded his eponymous label in Tokyo in 2009 and remains its artistic director. The independent house developed from experimental seasonal collections and custom performance clothing into a Paris couture-calendar practice centred on modular construction, advanced materials, handwork and individual fit. Nakazato also serves as representative director of the company incorporated in 2015.
From the label’s first years, Nakazato designed custom stage clothing for performers including Fergie and Lady Gaga. The practice later expanded into ballet and opera commissions for institutions including the Grand Théâtre de Genève, Boston Ballet and the Bavarian State Opera. Performance introduced demands of movement, durability, sound and character that continued to inform the couture atelier.
Nakazato’s graduation collection received an Innovation Award selected by Ann Demeulemeester, while footwear from the project entered the permanent collection of MoMu in Antwerp. He also received the ITS Vertice Award in 2008 and the YKK Award in 2009. The sequence established institutional recognition before the launch of his label.
Nakazato entered the Royal Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp in 2004 and completed its fashion programme in 2008. The school’s emphasis on concept, silhouette and independent authorship gave him a European framework for experiments begun in Tokyo and established the technical and research-led approach that later shaped his own house.
YUIMA NAKAZATO divisions and practices
The house operates as one designer-led studio. Couture, modular products, bespoke work and performance costumes share the same research into adaptable construction and material life cycles.
Couture-week collections
- YUIMA NAKAZATO couture
- Paris Haute Couture Week Guest House; official guest participation from 2016
- The principal collection structure combines one-off clothing, experimental fabrication and field research. Guest House status places the label on the official calendar without permanent-member designation.
TYPE-1 and modular garments
- TYPE-1
- Developed from the late 2010s; active product and technology system
- Garments are assembled without conventional needle-and-thread construction through proprietary resin and metal fastenings. The system supports adjustment, repair and reconfiguration around individual wearers.
Custom and performance costume
- Bespoke stage and performance work
- 2009–present
- The studio has produced custom clothing for musicians and designed costumes for opera and ballet, including collaborations with Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, the Grand Théâtre de Genève, Boston Ballet and the Bavarian State Opera.
Technology and material research
- Unit System, Biosmocking and material development
- 2016–present
- Research projects connect digital fabrication, responsive fibres, Japanese textile knowledge and modular assembly. They remain integrated into the house and do not operate as independent labels.
YUIMA NAKAZATO collaborations and institutions
Long-term technical partners, performance makers and museums have shaped the house’s collection development and public record.
Spiber
- Brewed Protein™ and Biosmocking
- 2016–present
- The biomaterials company supplies protein-based fibres and worked with the studio on Biosmocking, a controlled-contraction process used across BIRTH, COSMOS, EVOKE, MAGMA, UTAKATA and related collections.
JAXA and Toray
- HARMONIZE research
- 2017–2018
- Dialogue with JAXA’s spacesuit development team and Toray materials informed HARMONIZE, which used recycled parachute and airbag components alongside Ultrasuede® PX.
THE EUGENE Studio
- BIRTH
- 2019
- The creative studio contributed to the conceptual development of BIRTH and its proposition for a more individualised relationship between clothing and wearer.
Ryuichi Sakamoto and Robbie Spencer
- EVOKE
- 2021
- Sakamoto’s water-related compositions and Spencer’s styling supported the hybrid Yokohama and digital presentation of EVOKE.
Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui and Chiharu Shiota
- Idomeneo, UTAKATA and UNVEIL
- 2023–2024
- Nakazato designed costumes for Cherkaoui’s production of Mozart’s Idomeneo, with stage design by Shiota. The project fed directly into two couture collections concerned with armour, war, fragility and red rope.
Museums and exhibitions
- 21_21 DESIGN SIGHT, Cité de la dentelle et de la mode, Tokyo City View and Oulu Art Museum
- 2018–2026
- These institutions have presented the house’s material systems, couture archive, stage costumes and fieldwork through dedicated exhibitions in Japan, France and Finland.