After backlash, Kim Kardashian West to drop Kimono name from underwear line

Kim Kardashian and Kanye West arrive for the 2019 Met Gala at the Metropolitan Museum of Artin New York in May. Pop culture icon Kim Kardashian West said Monday that she will change the name of her new Kimono line of underwear after being accused of cultural appropriation. Kardashian sparked a social media storm last week when she unveiled the new line, with some in Japan accusing her of disrespecting the traditional outfit. | AFP-JIJI. Sketched by the Pan Pacific Agency.

LOS ANGELES, Jul 3, 2019, The Japan Times. Less than a week after announcing an upcoming underwear line called Kimono Solutionwear, U.S. reality TV star Kim Kardashian West has dropped the brand name following a backlash from people in Japan, including the mayor of Kyoto, reported The Japan Times.

“My brands and products are built with inclusivity and diversity at their core and after careful thought and consideration, I will be launching my Solutionwear brand under a new name,” Kardashian West said in a statement Monday on social media including Instagram, where she has 142 million followers.

“I am always listening, learning and growing — I so appreciate the passion and varied perspectives that people bring to me. When I announced the name of my shapewear line, I did so with the best intentions in mind.”

In Tokyo on Monday, industry minister Hiroshige Seko tweeted that he will send officials from the Japan Patent Office to the U.S. next Tuesday to talk to relevant officials about the matter. Seko noted that Japan “will continue to watch the situation,” even though Kim has dropped using the word “kimono” in the name.

The TV-star-turned-businesswoman, whose other entrepreneurial ventures include makeup brand KKW Beauty and mobile game Kim Kardashian: Hollywood, announced “a new, solution-focused approach to shape enhancing underwear” called Kimono Solutionwear last Tuesday.

While a number of celebrities and fans expressed their support, Kardashian West’s social media accounts received hundreds of replies, many using the hashtag #KimOhNo, expressing distaste for her word choice.

As of Monday, more than 130,000 people had signed an online petition to “change this horrible cultural disrespect.”

Despite the backlash, in a statement to the New York Times last Thursday, Kardashian West said, “I understand and have deep respect for the significance of the kimono in Japanese culture,” but that she would not change the name.

Kyoto’s kimono-loving mayor, Daisaku Kadokawa, renowned for always wearing the attire while carrying out official duties, on Friday sent Kardashian West an open letter asking her to reconsider her attempt to trademark a name that includes the word “kimono.”

“Kimono is a traditional ethnic dress fostered in our rich nature and history with our predecessors’ tireless endeavors and studies, and it is a culture that has been cherished and passed down with care,” Kadokawa wrote.

The mayor went on to explain that the city, once the capital, is working to register kimono on UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage list and that the word kimono “should not be monopolized,” before expressing his hope that the American megastar will visit Kyoto.

According to public records available from the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, trademark applications for names such as “Kimono Intimates,” “Kimono Body” and “Kimono Solutionwear” have been filed and examined since April 2018. Kardashian West’s Los Angeles-based lingerie line company is Kimono Intimates Inc.

In its trademark application that is currently under review, Solutionwear, is characterized as “retail store services featuring clothing, lingerie, and accessories,” such as luggage bags, underclothing and swimwear “kimono.”

Share it


Exclusive: Beyond the Covid-19 world's coverage