Sou-Sou

Harajuku & Aoyama


Kyoto brand Sou-Sou is best known for making jikatabi – the rubber-soled, split-toed shoes worn by construction workers in Japan – in fun, playful prints. They also do other clothes and accessories that riff on traditional styles, including some really adorable stuff for kids.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Harajuku & Aoyama attractions

1. Taro Okamoto Memorial Museum

0.04 MILES

A painter and sculptor, Okamoto Tarō was Japan's most recognised artist from the post-WWII period, a rare avant-garde figure with mass appeal. His works…

2. Nezu Museum

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Nezu Museum offers a striking blend of old and new: a renowned collection of Japanese, Chinese and Korean antiquities in a gallery space designed by…

3. Prada Aoyama

0.17 MILES

Of course you could shop here, but pretty much everyone comes just to ogle the curvaceous glass bubbles of the boutique's exterior, designed by Herzog &…

4. Spiral Building

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The asymmetrical, geometric shape of architect Maki Fumihiko's Spiral Building (1985) may not look very sinuous on the outside, but the name will make…

5. SunnyHills Minami-Aoyama

0.31 MILES

Kengo Kuma's design for Taiwanese pineapple cake shop SunnyHills uses 3D-modelled latticework that's supposed to evoke a bamboo basket but also resembles…

6. Omote-sandō

0.38 MILES

This broad, tree-lined boulevard is lined with boutiques from the top European fashion houses. More interesting are the buildings themselves, designed by…

7. Tod's Omote-sandō

0.42 MILES

Pritzker Prize–winner Itō Toyō designed the Tod's boutique (2004). The criss-crossing strips of concrete take their inspiration from the zelkova trees…

8. Louis Vuitton Omote-sandō

0.48 MILES

Aoki Jun’s design for Louis Vuitton (2002) features offset panels of tinted glass behind sheets of metal mesh of varying patterns and is, fittingly, meant…