Nov 04, 2024
Issey Miyake installs pleating machine at Homme Plissé Tokyo | Wallpaper
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works. The silver machine hums quietly as it sets to work: two large rolls of white paper slowly rotate
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
The silver machine hums quietly as it sets to work: two large rolls of white paper slowly rotate as an orange top is inserted between them, its alignment guided by green lights, before emerging on the other side just minutes later – perfectly pleated. This is a spectacle that will now unfold regularly at the first flagship store for Homme Plissé Issey Miyake, which has just opened its doors in Tokyo’s Minami-Aoyama district.In a first for the Japanese brand, the pleating machine – used to create Issey Miyake’s signature pleated fabric – will be on full display to customers, behind walls of glass at the rear of the store. Issey Miyake has long been famed for its pleating technology, which tends to be shrouded in industry secrecy (a pleating machine has only been on public display once before, during a major 2016 exhibition celebrating Issey Miyake’s work at the National Art Center in Tokyo).The flagship interiors were created by Tokyo-based designer Yoshioka Tokujin, a decades-long Miyake collaborator (this is, impressively, his 17th store). Fusing the high-tech with the handcrafted, the store concept was inspired by the concept of monozukuri no gemba – ‘making things'. Spanning 225sq m in a 1970s building, the store covers an area where, until recently, three clothing shops were located, with Tokujin knocking down interior walls to create an open, airy space.A sense of lightness is bolstered by raw concrete walls whose exposed markings create an almost impressionistic feel, with paint-like daubs and industrial etchings in natural shades of white, grey, cream and peach – a perfect foil for the jewel-like pops of colour from the minimally-curated Homme Plissé collections on display. Added to the mix are mirror panels; soft grey wool cubed seating; and matte black steel clothing rails – clean-lined, graphic and angular – that appear to float weightlessly in the air, alongside seamlessly swiveling hangers.
Artist’s Palate: Tokujin Yoshioka’s wagashi
‘I tried to keep the original texture of the building,' Tokujin tells Wallpaper* ahead of the opening. ‘I wanted to express the feeling that time has passed. I think that designing a space is changing today because now you can buy everything online. I wanted to give value to customers coming into the shop. So I created a special space for the pleating machine, so that visitors can watch and experience the excitement of making things in front of them.'Exclusive to the store is the limited edition COLOR collection of long-sleeved T-shirts in ten shades, with a new black ‘Aoyama' logo designed by art director Katsumi Asaba on the back – all pleated on-site, behind a wall of glass. Each garment is cut and sewn to 1.5 times its final size, before being fed into the 1997 silver-painted Kyoto-made pleating. Labels are sewn in before they are wrapped in packaging made from used white pleating paper. The pleating is carried out by two Issey Miyake engineers (they normally work at Issey Miyake’s Pleats Kobo – a Tokyo design laboratory devoted to fabric pleating) clad stylishly, of course, in top-to-toe pleats, from caps to jumpsuits.The new flagship cements Minami-Aoyama’s status as a mecca for all things Issey Miyake. The street is already home to over half a dozen of their stores – from Issey Miyake, Pleats Please and HaaT to Reality Lab Issey Miyake (located on the site of Miyake’s first 1976 shop).
INFORMATIONisseymiyake.com
ADDRESS
3-18-14 Minami-AoyamaMinato-ku, TokyoJapan
VIEW GOOGLE MAPS
Receive our daily digest of inspiration, escapism and design stories from around the world direct to your inbox.
Danielle Demetriou is a British writer and editor who moved from London to Japan in 2007. She writes about design, architecture and culture (for newspapers, magazines and books) and lives in an old machiya townhouse in Kyoto.
Instagram - @danielleinjapan
Three new coffee makers, from AeroPress, Jura and Porsche x La Marzocco, range from the defiantly manual to the bells and whistles of a traditional countertop espresso machine
By Jonathan BellPublished 2 November 24
As the Venice Biennale enters its last few weeks, catch 'A Comparative Dialogue Act' at the Luxembourg Pavilion
By Amah-Rose AbramsPublished 2 November 24
A Berlin park and office space by Grüntuch Ernst Architeken offer a symbiotic relationship between urban design and green living materials
By Michael WebbPublished 2 November 24
As Discothèque gets ready to launch its first perfume collection, Mary Cleary catches up with the brand’s founders
By Mary ClearyPublished 13 October 24
Wallpaper* fashion features editor Jack Moss unpacks five trends and takeaways from the S/S 2025 shows, which paid ode to individual style and transformed the everyday
By Jack MossPublished 8 October 24
As Issey Miyake’s Le Sel d’Issey launched in Tokyo this week, we spoke with Tokujin Yoshioka about his ‘radiant’ bottle design and the scent's sacred and salty inspiration
By Danielle DemetriouPublished 29 August 24
Sleek and streamlined ensembles imbued with a sense of performance take centre stage in ‘Quiet on Set’, a portfolio of the A/W 2024 menswear collections photographed by Matthieu Delbreuve
By Jack MossPublished 27 August 24
We highlight the standout moments of the A/W 2024 season, from scrunched-up gloves and seductive leather ties to cocooning balaclavas and decadent feathers
By Jack MossPublished 14 August 24
Gucci’s ‘Then and Now’ exhibition in Tokyo celebrates 60 years of the Italian house’s presence in Japan. Here, local artisans tell Wallpaper* the story behind their contribution
By Jack MossPublished 5 August 24
In Tokyo’s Shibuya district, fashion label Diesel hosts an exhibition celebrating queer artist Tom of Finland, including a VR trip to ‘Tom House’ in Los Angeles and a capsule collection adorned with erotic illustrations
By Jack MossPublished 31 July 24
As Men’s Fashion Week S/S 2025 draws to a close, Wallpaper* picks the season’s most transporting runway sets, from giant cats at Dior Men to a ‘fairytale ravescape’ at Prada
By Jack MossPublished 29 June 24