Anime · Harajuku · Origin
Japanese streetwear for women.
Japanese streetwear for women thrives on contrast: loud Harajuku silhouettes next to quiet Tokyo cuts.
Most Wanted
What everyone wants.
All pieces
All of Streetwear.
Opium Graffiti Art Wide Leg Jeans
$137Gothic Y2K Kanji Chain Shorts
$77Opium Grunge Print Longsleeve Top
$137Y2K Flame Print Wide-Leg Jeans
$160Opium Harness Shirt
$89Opium Tactical Shoulder Shirt
$89Opium Studded Hoodie
$148Warcore Tactical Shirt
$113Opium Cyberpunk Leather Set
$184Opium Gothic Warrior Denim Set
$184

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Opium Avant-Garde Denim Set Y223
$148Japanese streetwear for women thrives on contrast: loud Harajuku silhouettes next to quiet Tokyo cuts. This collection gathers pieces that can do both — stand out when you want, pull back when you don't. For the bigger picture, see our Japanese Fashion Guide[empty paragraph]
Between Harajuku and minimalism
Japanese style doesn't lock itself into one box. On one side sit layers, pattern and volume from Harajuku, on the other the clear, almost strict line from Tokyo minimalism. Women mix both freely — a loud top over quiet trousers, a reduced jacket over a patterned skirt. The rule is that there's no fixed rule.
How to build the look
Start with a clear base and break it deliberately: wide Harajuku Hosen with a slim top, or a Windbreaker over a plain dress. Layering matters more than one statement piece. Keep colours muted and let cut and proportion do the work.
What's in the collection
We stock tops, trousers, jackets and dresses for women who take Japanese streetwear seriously — not costume, but everyday pieces that work between Tokyo and Berlin. Every item is built for mixing. Limited drops, no restocks.
Frequent Questions
What do women wear in Japan?
It varies strongly by neighbourhood. Harajuku runs on layers, colour and volume, while areas like Aoyama lean toward clean, minimalist cuts. Both share a thoughtful approach to proportion and a feel for fabric.
What do you call the Japanese streetwear style?
There's no single term. Common ones are Harajuku-Fashion for the loud, experimental side and Japanese Minimal for the quiet direction. Both sit within the same streetwear logic.
What brands do Japanese people wear?
Beyond known international labels, many wear independent Japanese brands that stand for cut, fabric quality and detail over big logos. That's exactly the approach our pieces mirror.
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.

















































