The animated history of the Judogi 柔道着の歴史
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- Опубліковано 8 вер 2024
- Support me on Patreon:
/ chadijudo
Sources:
1 - Judogi abstract:
www.jstage.jst...
2 - Yoshinori Iguchi's Jujutsu instructions (Taisho 15):
dl.ndl.go.jp/i...
3 - Eric Shahan's Jujutsu manual volume 03:
www.amazon.fr/...
4 - Kano's story:
judoinfo.com/k...
5 - IJF judogi history:
www.ijf.org/ne...
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@KODOKANJUDO - Спорт
Subtitles are available for this video, as well as all the sources of this presentation in the description.
Gracias! .
I remember in college someone tried to weak TKD gi in the Judo Club. One of the sleeves tore off almost immediately.
Hayakawa's contribution is amazing
In the 60s I saw a uwagi.. sleeve ripped off. The kid's mother kept putting starch on it, so when a guy ripped it off, we made a big deal of what a beast he was! LOL
Top content as always
Thanks for bringing the awareness of history to this art! 🙇
Thank you very much for the support
Great video! Never knew about the Sokuteki sleeve measuring thing.
Thank you for all the information and help
Just a polite note: early judogi were not made from bleached cotton. Indeed bleached fabric didn’t really come into use for dogi until very, very recently. Modern bleaching was not in use, and the traditional Japanese hot water process for lightening fabric that is used for some formal garments would have been unnecessarily (and frankly undesirably) extravagant for the dogi.
The fading of the unbleached, ecru coloured fabric to a bright white through training and washing is also reflective of Japanese aesthetic principles, it becomes in a sense a reflection of the work that the student has put into his training.
Another winner, Chadi!
We appreciate your effort and diligence,.
Thank you.
Thank you
A most interesting history Chadi . Your watercolor art would be an excellent addition . All the best for all future endeavors and Thank You .
Great suggestion I'll try
Kimono means "to wear" (ki 着) "something" (mono 物). So it is indeed correct, since kimono is an umbrella term to classic Japanese clothing, including dôgi, yukata etc.
I'd say, every dôgi is a kimono, but not every kimono is a dôgi.
This was a fun topic to learn from, thank you for sharing ☺️.
🙇🏻♂️
I’ve been waiting for a video like this; as a BJJ or practitioner I’ve always wonder about the uniform that’s is worn by almost every martial and it’s actual history
Thanks for the history lesson Big Thumbs up 👍
Thank you Thomas
Thanks for this précious informations
Greetings from Brasil, Chadi-san! Thank you for your channel! Osu
Very informative
Awesome video
Yes it's always very good quality content with you . A pleasure to watch . Hopefully we meet someday when I go back in France ;)
excellent
Excellent content my friend! Thank you very much for your work spreading judo!
Thank you so much my friend
Awesome video! I wonder how good-looking would be a judogi in white sown with navy blue thread...
Thanks for the explanation between the kimono and gi !
🙇🏻♂️
This is my favourite UA-cam channel it’s official
Thank you 🙇🏻♂️
Thank you for the story on the judo gi
Because I always wanted to know the story on the judo gi.
🙇🏻♂️
Hi Chadi....another very interesting video, thank you for posting, stay safe ok.....
Thank you Stefano, be safe
I was just wondering if you had done a video on the Judo Gi. I hope you will do a follow up video on where to grasp this garment. And if there are any differences with Shuai Jiao jackets, and what differences, if any, would need to be studied for no Gi grips and throws.
By the way, as I understand it. The use of cotton in the Judo Gi and the Chinese wrestling jacket didn't begin until the foreign occupation and colonization of China at about 1850. This traffic of American cotton increased markedly during the American Civil War. As the Confederacy contemplated their losses and need for capital. Laws were enacted to limit the use of hemp and replace it with southern cotton. Before this hemp was the fabric of choice. Due to its low cost, ease of availability, and greater strength. Sadly European "gun boat diplomacy" extorted the market in Asia with cotton, just as they had with Opium. Hemp had been used in sail manufacture, and was replaced by cotton to further the profit margin of slave holding states. That is the causative factor in why we use cotton today in so many articles. Going back to the beginning of the Ming Dynasty hemp was the fabric used for everyday workers clothes, ropes, sails, blankets, etcetera. High grade silk could only be worn by members of the Royal Family and the wealthy Chinese aristocracy. The Asian/American cotton trade and the development of Judo occurred at nearly the same time. Hence the cotton Judo Gi. Thanks Chadi.
I'll research it and share once I have enough information
@@Chadi Thank you. That would be cool and useful.
Peace.
Muchas gracias.
Thank you very much🙏🏻🙇🏻♂️
Hello Chadi awesome content as always!!!🥊 🥋
Thank you Elias
Love your channel, many good videos with great content 😃🥋🥊
Thank you very much🙏🏻🙇🏻♂️
Un excelente e informativo vídeo .
Gracias por sus magníficos vídeos 👍
🙇🏻♂️🙏🏻
Merci pour la traduction
Bonne continuation.
🙇🏻♂️
It's good to know some stuff like this 👍
🙏🏻
I love your videos ❤️
Thank you ❤
Sorry Chadi, but i think this is not quite correct. Kimono comes from the Heian periode and consists of two characters: the first (ki) meaning "to wear" and the second (mono) meaning object. So actually all clothing can be labeled as Kimono( also a judogi). Although nowadays it is more used for colorful traditional clothes. Ask Shogo,...😏🙏 Greetz
I'd rather call things more accurately, if we used the term kimono broadly a tuxedo would be also a kimono, dogi or keikogi is far better to define a wear that has a evolved tremendously to serve a particular purpose, lumping everything into kimono can confuse people.
@@Chadi okidoki.sir
Nice acknowlegment of Doug Rogers
🙇🏻♂️
I always preferred the ones that show the wrists and ankles
I like old school too
Does this explain why judo doesn't have wrist grabbing as much as aikido (which is more like old skool jujitsu training)
Please Reach out if you are in Abuja and interested in training.
In bjj in Portuguese the qi is called quimono or kimono.
DoGi is most accurate
@@Chadi tell that to the Brazilians
@@berniekatzroy the majority of the world call it kimono
@@Chadi ohh
In Judo too, but our senseis always teach that judogi is the correct word, but since everyone says kimono, we gotta say kimono lol
Is there any option of a retro dogi available in the market???
🙂🏆🏆
Fantastic!
Thank you 😁
Did the Japanese wear the judogi “commando style” at that time? Is it still common to do so nowadays? It was a requirement at my old dojo many years ago.
I don't know. I only know that wrapped underwear existed and that women apparently didn't use them.
Juban and momohiki are simply undergarments
@@Chadi So judokas should not wear underwear under their judogi then, as the juban is already the undergarment. Correct?
Now the real question. Single weave or double? Personally, because I live in the tropics so single weave feels best for me.
I'm not sure but I think double weave
Always double weave, never fails single weave tears far too easily. Unfortunately double weave uwagi can be costly
who is the western Judoka walking in Japan streets at the beginning ?
1:43 what is the name of that grip, lol
This video is gold. I im a karate practicioner. And im interested about karate gi derivation from judo gi. Do you have some clue about that?
Funkoshi got the dogi from Judo, and performed a demonstration with it. Before karatekas wore shorts only with a belt.
I think adopting the gi was a way to make karate seem more Japanese, rather than okinawan.
@@Chadi yes, I know that. But, who develop kartegi from judogi after that event? Who is the person behind keikogis develooment?
Today I learned that oriental martial clothes look like pajamas, because they more or less were pajamas at some point. Nice.
Well to be fair, undergarments and pyjamas are somewhat different
Judo: Its a big pajamas party
@@Chadi not really at the time
Chadi I have a question for you does judo, jujutsu descend from Chinese shuai jiao
No, at first when reading you might stumble into this conclusion, but with more research, even modern shuai jiao isn't completely 100% Chinese.
@@Chadi thank you my brother. Do you have an email or social media to contact you
@@L.C1993 my insta chadi.he
So Shuai Jiao comes from Mongolian Wrestling?
So What karate people use before the Karategui?
There's black and white photos of karatekas wearing shorts only
Shorts, underpants or nothing.😏
I'm surprised by the comment about westerners not liking the nakedness given that they wrestled half naked all the time?
Edwardian/Victorian era was big on modest clothing, Jujutsu was gaining a lot of popularity at the time in the west, modest gear was more appealing plus you had women who wanted to train. Iguchi stated the nakedness part in his book, again it could be a Japanese perspective only on the matter.
@@Chadi thanks, really enjoying the content 👍
First and fuji...
🤙🏻
Awesome video