Many but not all Japanese schools have seasonal uniforms are make seaonal adjustments. This of ourse only occurs at those schools with uniforms and is most common at private schools. Some schools have entirely different uniforms for summer and winter. Most schools make only minor changes such as adding seaters as jackets to the summer school uniform. Most of this occurs at state primary schools. The secondary schools have essentially the same uniforms for both summer and wnter.
Only a fraction of Japanese elementary schools require uniforms. There are generally no seasonal clothing rules at the schools without uniforms. It was left up to the parents to deal with the matter of seasonally appropriate clothing. Many Japanese parents until the 1980s generally saw short oants as the appropriate dress for boys. Thus seasonal wear meant adding sweaters, jackets, perhaps kneesocks, and in really cold weather a heavy coat.
Many of the Japanese schools which require uniforms have seasonal requirements. We do not yet have detailed information on the different seasonal adjustments. The approach to seasonality varies at Japanese primary schools. Japan has both primary schools that have uniforms and others that do not hve uniforms. While at the non-uniform schools the seasonal clothing changes are left up to the parents discretion. At the uniform chools it is quite differnt.
The most common is to wear jackets during the colder months. Generally the boys wear short pants whether it is winter or summer. The boys might commonly wear kneesocks rather than ankle socks in the winter. Younger boys might wear tights at some schools.Many of these schools have destinct summer and winter uniforms and a time table as to when the shift takes place, a schedule that often does not precisely follow the vageries of actual weather conditions. The schools vary as to how closely they enforce the schedule. Some schools are very strict, others less so. Even in the schools that strictly enfore the uniform regime, often it is left to the parents as to whether the boys wear their overcoats during the winter.
A Japanese reader reports, "Many Japanese schools will shift all at once from the
summer to the winter uniform and then back (common shift dates are October
1 and June 1). Some schools seem to permit a period of a month or
so (months of October and May , for example) in which either uniform is
acceptable. Gyosei seems to shift all at once; even though the weather had
turned coolish by the time this picture was taken. However, one of the
boys is wearing a sweater and there seems to be no objection to that.
Sweaters are okay, but long pants under no circumstances would be
acceptable at elite uniformed boysschools in Japan until the boy enters
middle school, not even on the coldest of winter days."
It is the private schools that have the most destinctive seasonal uniforms. One school for example has inter uniform of peaked cap, white shirt, red tie, and a grey short pants suits with an optional overcoat. For the summer, the shorts, socks, and shoes are the same but
there is no tie, no jacket, and a short-sleeved white shirt. Instead of
the poeaked cap, a typical Japanese summer primary uniform white, round hat.
Note that in the image here that the boy in the sweater shows the effect of contemporary boys
street fashions with long baggy shorts (figure 1). His knees and calves are tanned, but his upper legs are much paler. He clearly spent the summer in the contemporary knee-length shorts.
One sometimes encounters the two-toned leg effect at the end of the summer
when boys go back into the trim, snug shorts that characterize school
uniforms. (opposite of what a British contributor noted in the spring at
his school when boys shifted out of knee into ankle socks -- then it was
the upper legss that were tanned and the calves that were pale.).
Related Chronolgy Pages in the Boys' Historical Web Site
Late 19th century]
[The 1930s]
[The 1940s]
[The 1930s]
[The 1940s]
[The 1950s]
[The 1960s]
[The 1970s]
[The 1980s]
Related Style Pages in the Boys' Historical Web Site
[Long pants suits]
[Short pants suits]
[Socks]
[Eton suits]
[Jacket and trousers]
[Blazer]
[School sandals]
Navigate the Boys' Historical Clothing Web Page
[Return to Main school uniform page]
[Introduction]
[Activities]
[Biographies]
[Chronology]
[Clothing styles]
[Countries]
[Bibliographies]
[Contributions]
[FAQs]
[Japanese glossary]
[Satellite sites]
[Tools]
[Boys' Clothing Home]