
Korean Traditional · 1980s · Korean
Production
handmade
Material
silk
Culture
Korean
Influences
traditional Korean hanbok construction
This traditional Korean jeogori features a fitted bodice with a characteristic curved front closure and dramatically flared sleeves that create a bell-like silhouette. The sage green silk fabric displays an all-over geometric wave or scale pattern that appears to be woven or printed into the textile. The garment shows typical jeogori construction with a high neckline, short bodice length, and the distinctive Korean curved front panel closure system with ties. The sleeves extend in a wide, flowing shape that would create graceful movement when worn. The geometric surface pattern consists of repeating curved lines that create a subtle textural effect across the entire garment, demonstrating traditional Korean textile design principles.


These two jeogori jackets reveal how Korean traditional dress absorbed outside influences while maintaining its essential DNA. The earlier sage green piece holds to classical hanbok proportions—those gracefully curved sleeves, the precise tie closure, the clean geometric patterning that echoes traditional Korean textiles.
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These two jeogori jackets reveal how Korean traditional dress absorbed outside influences while maintaining its essential DNA. The earlier sage green piece holds to classical hanbok proportions—those gracefully curved sleeves, the precise tie closure, the clean geometric patterning that echoes traditional Korean textiles.
These two jeogori jackets reveal how Korean traditional dress held its essential DNA across half a century, even as subtle shifts marked changing times. The earlier sage green piece shows the classic proportions—those dramatically wide sleeves that taper to fitted cuffs, the precise V-neck closure, and the ribbon ties (goreum) that define hanbok's architectural silhouette.


These two jeogori jackets reveal how Korean traditional dress held its essential DNA across half a century, even as subtle shifts marked changing times. The earlier sage green piece shows the classic proportions—those dramatically wide sleeves that taper to fitted cuffs, the precise V-neck closure, and the ribbon ties (goreum) that define hanbok's architectural silhouette.