• Home
  • Style
    • Alternative Style Ideas
    • Burlesque & Vintage Style Ideas
    • Gothic Fashion Tips
    • Japanese Fashion Styles
    • Plus-size Clothing Tips
    • Tattoos and Piercing Ideas
  • Health & Beauty
    • Hair Styles
    • Make Up Tips
    • Make Up Tutorials
    • Beauty Tips & Reviews
    • Health & Depression
    • Vegan & Vegetarian Health
  • How-To
    • How-To Guides
    • DIY Arts and Crafts
    • Art & Creative Writing Ideas
    • Alternative Student Jobs
    • Interesting Hobbies
    • Indie Travel Guides
  • Reviews
    • Music reviews
    • Film reviews
    • Comics & Anime Reviews
    • Book reviews
    • Video Game Reviews
    • Events & Arts Reviews
  • You
    • Interviews
    • Babe's Bible
    • Geek Girl
    • Self Development
    • Spirit, Paganism & Wicca
      • Daily Horoscope
      • Paganism for beginners
      • Test your psychic ability
  • Advice
  • Feminism
    • Feminism
    • Feminist Icons
    • Activism
    • Politics
    • LGBTQ
  • Fun & Win
    • Competitions
    • Fun quizzes
    • Daily Horoscope
    • Goth band names
    • Your mooky name
    • Psychic test
  • Write for Us
    • Write for us
    • Advertising
    • About us
    • Press Room
    • Secret Survey
  • About
  • Forum
    • Forum
    • Secret Survey
    • Write for us
    • RSS Feed
    • Links

  • Home
  • >
  • Opinion

An interview with Masayuki Yoshinaga

Interview by Keller (editor of EGL Magazine)

Tokyo-based reportage photographer Masayuki Yoshinaga has recently turned his camera onto people following two underground sub-cultures of Japan: Gothic Lolitas and Bosozoku (Japanese biker gangs). Keller of EGL Magazine got to hear what he really, really thought of Gothic Lolitas.

Most people will instantly recognise the Gothic Lolita style, characterised by frills, lace, ribbon, bows and bonnets: a sinister twist on British historical style, as the Japanese take on the punk rock and new romantics fashions of Britain in the 1980s.

Japanese street fashion has also been greatly influenced by the clothes dorned on the music stages of Japan - by Visual Kei, or visual rock bands (ften referred to as J-Rock).

Beyond the musical and historical influences, the Gothic Lolita look now draws on inspiration from films, animations and computer games.

When asked where his inspiration for his photography is drawn from, Masayuki Yoshinaga simply answered "Japan", the same influence he believes his photography subjects draw their fashion inspiration from. Although the style has some roots in British fashion, the style seen on the streets of Japan is individual and unique.

Masayuki's photography seeks to find the person inside the fashion, with accompanying information snippets: where they bought their clothes, what they have hand-made, what they sum up their style as. He claims to favour photographing "people with a great deal of personalities".

But despite the British love, and often, obsession with this unique Japanese fashion wave, Masayuki said of the style: "It's not purely original. It is rather a remake of imported fashion. It's gaudy, but I don't think it's iconic."


More Interviews with female icons

  • More: Interviews with female icons | Riot Grrl

Mission statement

Mookychick believes that climbing trees and riding giant turtles is more fun and girly than worrying about make-up. But if you want to worry about make-up instead of turtles? Fine by us. Be you feminist, kitten, punk, emo, indie, goth, witch, vegan, horror junky, intellectual, christian goth, corset queen, geek, unicorn, sea monkey... be you into alternative style, alternative health, spirituality, comics, manga, j-pop, harajuku or jock culture... we will always love you.

Masayuki Yoshinaga Masayuki Yoshinaga

Copyright Masayuki Yoshinaga

keller of EGL MagazineKeller is the editor of EGL Magazine ('Exclusively Gothic Lifestyle', an online magazine covering all aspects of modern gothic lifestyle and culture). Keller, who has a degree in writing - which includes journalism - believes gothic fashion is a joy: She loves all the lace and chains and frills and ruffles and the great fact that black is the most slimming colour there is. On discovering this, she's never looked back.



Arts & Crafts

Crafting Ideas

Crafting Ideas

Goth dating Mooncup natural period Real Punk Radio Moxie Beauty Miss Discreet