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Steampunk pants.
Steampunk pants start where regular pants end.
Most Wanted
What everyone wants.
All pieces
All of Steampunk pants.
Opium Graffiti Art Wide Leg Jeans
€114,99Gothic Y2K Kanji Chain Shorts
€64,99Opium Crimson Tactical Set
€134,99Opium Wasteland Destroyer Set
€164,99Opium Cyberpunk Leather Set
€154,99Opium Gothic Warrior Denim Set
€154,99Opium Convertible Flame Jeans
€164,99Opium Fur Spiral Flare Jeans
€154,99Opium Frost Wraith Ravepants
€114,99Gothic Unisex Ripped Denim
€54,99Steampunk pants start where regular pants end — high waist, heavy fabric, buckles instead of belt loops and details that recall workshops and machine rooms.
What sets steampunk pants apart
The cut draws from the 19th century: high waist, straight or slightly tapered legs, often with a pleat. Then come steampunk details — straps, buckles, patch pockets with metal closures, sometimes asymmetric elements. The material is heavy: canvas, twill, faux leather or wool blends in black, brown or dark gray.
Combining steampunk pants
A steampunk pant works best as the outfit's anchor. Add a plain shirt or longsleeve, heavy boots and a vest or jacket from the Steampunk collection. If you're wearing the look everyday, keep the rest clean — the pants with buckle details signal enough. The Punk and Rave Guide shows how to nest the style into larger outfits.
Steampunk pants at Fūga Studios
Our selection delivers high-waisted pants with strap details and industrial aesthetics — wearable for everyday, rooted in the Punk traditionWhat materials are steampunk tops made from?
K-Fashion describes the style determined by Korean pop artists — layering, bold proportions, streetwear influences mixed with tailoring elements. It's less about specific brands than about a conscious, detailed assembly.
What defines a steampunk outfit?
Steampunk blends Victorian silhouettes with industrial details: gears, brass, leather, heavy fabrics. Typical pieces are coats, vests, high-waisted pants and accessories like goggles or pocket watches.
What's the steampunk aesthetic?
Steampunk is retro-futurism — the idea of how fashion would look if the steam engine had dominated the 20th century. The aesthetic mixes Victorian cuts with machinery elements: rivets, gears, brass and heavy materials.
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.










































