Anime · Harajuku · Origin
Japanese coats.
Long, precise, asymmetric. The coat as a Tokyo statement.
All pieces
All of Streetwear.
Japanese coats merge precision with asymmetry — cut like Tokyo architecture, worn as a stance. At Fūga you'll find coats that operate between Harajuku layering and minimalist silhouette.
What makes Japanese streetwear coats stand out.
Oversized cuts, asymmetric zippers, raw edges. Japanese coats follow no European fit logic. The references are Comme des Garçons and Undercover; the execution is street: layering over cargo pants and Harajuku pants, plus heavy boots. The coat defines the silhouette — everything else submits to it.
How to wear Japanese streetwear coats.
Open over a black longsleeve, with wide pants and chunky soles. Or closed as the sole statement piece over narrow bottoms. For those diving deeper into Japanese streetwear, the Japanese Fashion Guide covers the fundamentals. The windbreaker version for warmer months lives in our Japanese Windbreaker collection.
What's in the collection.
Oversized trenchcoats, kimono-inspired coats, technical parkas with hidden pockets. All in black, grey, off-white — the palette stays Tokyo-true. Each piece is a drop; no restocks.
Frequently asked questions
What sets Japanese coats apart from Western designs?
Japanese streetwear coats lean on asymmetry, oversized silhouettes, and raw construction. The cuts are architectural rather than body-conscious — inspired by designers like Yohji Yamamoto and Harajuku street culture.
Which outfits work with Japanese streetwear coats?
They shine strongest over wide cargo pants or Harajuku pants with heavy boots. Keep it monochrome, use layering, anchor the coat as your silhouette.
Why is Japanese streetwear so sought after?
Because they merge function and aesthetic without compromise to mainstream. The cuts stem from a design tradition that treats clothing as architecture — not decoration.
2015 → today
Fūga
風雅
Fūga isn't for everyone.
Berlin Plattenbau origins, Asia-inspired. Creative, but never fully fitting into the system. Tokyo 2015 as the starting point — six niche phases since then.
Today: Berlin · Shanghai · Tokyo · Poznań. We know our designers by name. Limited drops, no restocks.
We aren't dropouts. We know the system — went through training, worked, kept building. Both sides hold.
How Fūga evolved
One line. No closed worlds.
What started as Streetwear in Tokyo has shifted over the years — through different phases, our own and collective.
01
Streetwear / Anime
The first designs. Anime prints, Harajuku characters, Tokyo connection.
02
Techwear
Functional, layered, dark. Tokyo reduction translated into fabric.
03
Gothic
Heavier, uncompromising, more shadow. Grew up parallel to Techwear.
04
Opium
Berghain aesthetic with street cuts. Raw, black, Berlin avant-garde meets Streetwear.
05
Rave
Cyberpunk meets the Berghain floor. Reflective, tactical, sound-system ready.
06
Businesscore
Tailored cuts with Streetwear logic. Growing older without going 9-to-5. Stay edgy.
What comes next, we'll write when the time comes.


































