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Yohji Yamamoto Pour Homme Rewrites Archival History With the 1994-Inspired “Cracked Embroidery” Drop

Summary

  • The “Cracked Embroidery” series breathes new life into the iconic patterns and silhouettes of the 1994-95 Autumn/Winter “Marionnette” collection
  • Reconstructed garments utilize Yohji Yamamoto’s signature triacetate-polyester tuxedo fabric to achieve a fluid and light-absorbing matte finish
  • The capsule features two jacket variations alongside voluminous trousers and T-shirts that serve as modern echoes of archival greatness

Yohji Yamamoto Pour Homme is reaching back into the vault to revive one of its most culturally significant moments with the “Cracked Embroidery” (ひび割れ刺繍) series. By centering the collection on the 1994-95 Autumn/Winter “Marionnette” archive, Yamamoto is not merely re-releasing old garments but rather reinvigorating the philosophical themes of fragility and control that defined his ‘90s output.

The technical foundation of the series rests on Yamamoto’s staple triacetate-polyester “tuxedo” cloth. This specific textile is favored for its weight and ability to hold a deep, light-absorbing black while maintaining a soft, kinetic movement that is central to the POUR HOMME silhouette. The “Cracked Embroidery” itself is applied with precision to replicate the look of weathered, fracturing surfaces, a motif that famously debuted during the “Marionnette” show to symbolize the fragile nature of the human form.

The lineup consists of two distinct jacket silhouettes and two pant variations, all of which are built using the oversized, draped patterns established in the mid-90s. Beyond the outerwear, the collection includes specialized T-shirts that serve as a more accessible entry point into the series’ textured aesthetic. Every piece in the range reflects a commitment to the “unfinished” look, using embroidery not as a mere decoration, but as a structural narrative that connects the current collection to the brand’s avant-garde roots.

The 1994 “Marionnette” show remains a high-water mark of runway theater in Japanese avant-garde, where models moved with the stiff, disjointed grace of puppets. This new series captures that “ghost” of the archive through a specialized cracked embroidery technique, designed to mimic the weathered and fracturing surfaces that have long been a Yamamoto signature. The choice of “Tuxedo” fabric is a technical nod to the brand’s DNA, offering the precise weight and “crow-black” depth required to make the intricate embroidery pop.

The Yohji Yamamoto Pour Homme “Cracked Embroidery” series drops April 29 following an exclusive pop-up preview at Hankyu Men’s Tokyo and Osaka.

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