Streetwear Bucket Hats 'Yin Yang Holo'
Streetwear Bucket Hat with Holographic Yin Yang — Black Cotton Y2K
The Yin Yang Holo bucket hat takes one of the most recognizable symbols of East Asian aesthetics and pulls it through a Y2K filter. A holographic yin yang patch sits at the front of the black cotton crown, the iridescent finish shifting between pale blue, lavender and silver depending on the light. The base is the same low-profile six-panel construction we build every Japan Clothing streetwear bucket hat around, with a slightly inward-curving brim and a weighted cotton hand.
The holographic finish is heat-pressed onto the panel rather than printed, which means the iridescence stays alive through fifty washes instead of dulling after a season. The cotton has been pre-washed before stitching, so the bucket hat softens immediately, and the black base holds its depth without fading at the edges. Stitching density runs at twelve to fourteen per inch, the kind of detail that separates streetwear bucket hats built to last from mass-market hats that lose shape inside a year.
The yin yang motif sits in the wider tradition of Y2K and Harajuku streetwear, where Eastern symbols were borrowed by Tokyo brands like A Bathing Ape and Neighborhood in the late 1990s and recast against rave culture, club aesthetics and the iridescent finishes that defined the era. We kept the patch small and centered rather than turning the whole crown holographic, because a streetwear bucket hat works best when the detail rewards a second look rather than dominating the silhouette.
Wear it pulled low under a sukajan at night, layered with a holographic windbreaker for full Y2K commitment, or paired with a plain black tee when you want the hat to do the talking. The Yin Yang Holo sits alongside the rest of the Japan Clothing streetwear bucket hats edit, from cotton to denim to embroidered styles, all built around the same patient construction.
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Streetwear Bucket Hats 'Yin Yang Holo'
Streetwear Bucket Hats 'Yin Yang Holo'
Streetwear Bucket Hat with Holographic Yin Yang — Black Cotton Y2K
The Yin Yang Holo bucket hat takes one of the most recognizable symbols of East Asian aesthetics and pulls it through a Y2K filter. A holographic yin yang patch sits at the front of the black cotton crown, the iridescent finish shifting between pale blue, lavender and silver depending on the light. The base is the same low-profile six-panel construction we build every Japan Clothing streetwear bucket hat around, with a slightly inward-curving brim and a weighted cotton hand.
The holographic finish is heat-pressed onto the panel rather than printed, which means the iridescence stays alive through fifty washes instead of dulling after a season. The cotton has been pre-washed before stitching, so the bucket hat softens immediately, and the black base holds its depth without fading at the edges. Stitching density runs at twelve to fourteen per inch, the kind of detail that separates streetwear bucket hats built to last from mass-market hats that lose shape inside a year.
The yin yang motif sits in the wider tradition of Y2K and Harajuku streetwear, where Eastern symbols were borrowed by Tokyo brands like A Bathing Ape and Neighborhood in the late 1990s and recast against rave culture, club aesthetics and the iridescent finishes that defined the era. We kept the patch small and centered rather than turning the whole crown holographic, because a streetwear bucket hat works best when the detail rewards a second look rather than dominating the silhouette.
Wear it pulled low under a sukajan at night, layered with a holographic windbreaker for full Y2K commitment, or paired with a plain black tee when you want the hat to do the talking. The Yin Yang Holo sits alongside the rest of the Japan Clothing streetwear bucket hats edit, from cotton to denim to embroidered styles, all built around the same patient construction.
Original: $25.00
-65%$25.00
$8.75Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Streetwear Bucket Hat with Holographic Yin Yang — Black Cotton Y2K
The Yin Yang Holo bucket hat takes one of the most recognizable symbols of East Asian aesthetics and pulls it through a Y2K filter. A holographic yin yang patch sits at the front of the black cotton crown, the iridescent finish shifting between pale blue, lavender and silver depending on the light. The base is the same low-profile six-panel construction we build every Japan Clothing streetwear bucket hat around, with a slightly inward-curving brim and a weighted cotton hand.
The holographic finish is heat-pressed onto the panel rather than printed, which means the iridescence stays alive through fifty washes instead of dulling after a season. The cotton has been pre-washed before stitching, so the bucket hat softens immediately, and the black base holds its depth without fading at the edges. Stitching density runs at twelve to fourteen per inch, the kind of detail that separates streetwear bucket hats built to last from mass-market hats that lose shape inside a year.
The yin yang motif sits in the wider tradition of Y2K and Harajuku streetwear, where Eastern symbols were borrowed by Tokyo brands like A Bathing Ape and Neighborhood in the late 1990s and recast against rave culture, club aesthetics and the iridescent finishes that defined the era. We kept the patch small and centered rather than turning the whole crown holographic, because a streetwear bucket hat works best when the detail rewards a second look rather than dominating the silhouette.
Wear it pulled low under a sukajan at night, layered with a holographic windbreaker for full Y2K commitment, or paired with a plain black tee when you want the hat to do the talking. The Yin Yang Holo sits alongside the rest of the Japan Clothing streetwear bucket hats edit, from cotton to denim to embroidered styles, all built around the same patient construction.























