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・ Aloha Farmhouse
・ Aloha Festivals
・ Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite
・ Aloha from Hawaii Via Satellite (album)
・ Aloha from Hell
・ Aloha Golf Club
・ Aloha High School
・ Aloha Jewish Chapel
・ Aloha Milkyway
・ Aloha Moon
・ Aloha Music File
・ Aloha Oe (film)
・ Aloha Paradise
・ Aloha Partners
・ Aloha Petroleum
Aloha shirt
・ Aloha Stadium
・ Aloha State Park
・ Aloha Station Trust
・ Aloha Summer
・ Aloha Taylor
・ Aloha Tower
・ Aloha Tower Marketplace
・ Aloha Township, Michigan
・ Aloha Vet
・ Aloha Wanderwell
・ Aloha World Sevens
・ Aloha Yachts
・ Aloha ʻOe
・ Aloha ʻĀina


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Aloha shirt : ウィキペディア英語版
Aloha shirt

The Aloha shirt, commonly referred to as a Hawaiian shirt, is a style of dress shirt originating in Hawaii. It is currently the premier textile export of the Hawaii manufacturing industry. The dress shirts are printed, mostly short-sleeved, and collared. They usually have buttons, sometimes for the entire length of the dress shirt, and sometimes just down to the chest (pullover). Aloha dress shirts usually have a left chest pocket sewn in, often with attention to ensure the printed pattern remains continuous. Aloha shirts may be worn by men or women; women's aloha shirts usually have a lower-cut, v-neck style. The lower hem is straight, as the shirts are not meant to be tucked in.
Aloha shirts exported to the mainland United States and elsewhere are called Hawaiian shirts and often brilliantly colored with floral patterns or generic Polynesian motifs and are worn as casual, informal wear.
Traditional men's aloha shirts manufactured for local Hawaiian residents are usually adorned with traditional Hawaiian quilt designs, tapa designs, and simple floral patterns in more muted colors. Contemporary aloha shirts may have prints that do not feature any traditional Hawaiian quilt or floral designs and instead may have such elements as automobiles, drinks, sports team logos, or other elements arranged in the same pattern as a traditional aloha shirt.
Aloha shirts manufactured for local wear are considered formal wear in business and government, and thus are regarded as equivalent to a shirt, coat, and tie (generally impractical in the warmer climate of Hawaii) in all but the most formal of settings.〔(Mike Gordon: ''Aloha shirts'', The Honolulu Advertiser, 2.7.2006 ) and (''"Wear Aloha" Exhibit Opens At Honolulu Hale'', 8.6.2006 ) for the tradition of ''Aloha Friday'', as well as Dale Hope: ''The Aloha shirt'' with a different year of introduction〕 Malihini (newcomers) and tourists (visitors) often wear designs of many bright colors while Kamaʻāina (or those who have been living in the islands for a long time) seem to prefer less busy patterns. These shirts often are printed on the interior, resulting in the muted color on the exterior, and are called "reverse print". For those not familiar, it may appear to be a defect in manufacturing as the shirt appears to be sewn together inside-out.
The related concept of "Aloha Attire" stems from the Aloha shirt. Semi-formal functions such as weddings, birthday parties, and dinners are often designated as "Aloha Attire", meaning that men wear Aloha shirts and women wear muumuu or other tropical prints. Because Hawaii tends to be more casual, it is rarely appropriate to attend such functions in full evening wear like on the mainland;〔 instead, Aloha Attire is seen as the happy medium between excessive formality and casual wear (i.e. business casual). "Aloha Friday," a now-common tradition of celebrating the end of the workweek by wearing more casual attire on Fridays, initially grew out of an effort to promote aloha shirts.〔("Aloha Friday" Maui No Ka 'Oi Magazine Vol.11 No.2 (March 2007) )〕 Although not uncommon to see professional women participating in Aloha Friday, it is more common to see men dressing this way.
==History==

According to Honolulu Advertiser's advertisement of June 28, 1935, Aloha Shirt, was first sold at "Musashi-ya shoten" in Honolulu, was preceded as "Musashi-ya", established by Japanese immigrant Chōtarō Miyamoto (宮本長太郎) in 1904. After Miyamoto’s death, in 1915, the shop was revised as "Musashiya shoten" (Japanese title: 武蔵屋呉服店 (Musashi-ya-gofukuten) by his son Kōichirō Miyamoto, who sewed Aloha shirt using Japanese Kimono fabrics and sold it first.
The modern Aloha shirt was devised in the early 1930s by Chinese merchant Ellery Chun of King-Smith Clothiers and Dry Goods, a store in Waikiki.〔Martin, Douglas. ("Ellery Chun, 91, Popularizer Of the Shirt That Won Hawaii" ), ''The New York Times'' 8 June 2000. Retrieved on 28 August 2014.〕 The first advertisement in the Honolulu Advertiser for Chun's Aloha shirt was published on June 28, 1935. Local residents, especially surfers, and tourists descended on Chun's store and bought every shirt he had. Within years, major designer labels sprung up all over Hawaii and began manufacturing and selling Aloha shirts en masse. Retail chains in Hawaii, including mainland based ones, may mass-produce a single aloha shirt design for employee uniforms.
After World War II, many servicemen and servicewomen returned to the United States from Asia and the Pacific islands with aloha shirts made in Hawaii since the 1930s. Tourists began flocking to Hawaii in the 1950s as faster airplanes allowed for easier travel and the former U.S. territory became a state in 1959. Alfred Shaheen, a textile manufacturer, revolutionized the garment industry in postwar Hawaii by designing, printing and producing aloha shirts and other ready-to-wear items under one roof. The tropical-print shirts for men and sundresses for women became standard and sometimes tacky souvenirs for travelers, but Shaheen raised the garments to the level of high fashion with artistic prints, high-grade materials and quality construction. Tori Richard is a brand of these shirts, established in Honolulu in late 1956.
Elvis Presley wore a Shaheen-designed red aloha shirt featured on the album cover for the ''Blue Hawaii'' soundtrack in 1961.〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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