Hatsune Miku wears a blue - green gradient silk yukata, gradient skirt - pants, and transparent platform geta, paired with accessories like holographic projection fans. The cyberpunk Japanese - style festival outfit combines tradition and a sense of technology, presenting a flowing light show at night.
At the summer festival, Hatsune Miku made a stunning appearance in a cyberpunk-style Japanese festival outfit. A blue-green gradient silk yukata is paired with a front-short and back-long gradient skirt-pants, complemented by transparent platform geta, and accessorized with technological items such as a holographic projection fan and neon tube twin-tail hair accessories. The perfect fusion of tradition and technology brings a flowing feast of light and shadow.

"VOCALOID Fashion Special: Hatsune Miku 2077 Summer Festival - The Evolution of Cyber Japanese Aesthetic in Light and Shadow"
When the holographic fireworks explode in the digital night sky, the festival of electronic beings kicks off. Hatsune Miku arrives, treading on the neon lights in a special cyber yukata. This battle-suit, jointly created by the V-family Laboratory and the Future Kimono Workshop, brings the aesthetics of the collision between tradition and technology to the extreme.
The blue-green gradient silk on the upper body is like a frozen aurora. The pixel wave dots on the shoulders leave data-stream afterimages as she moves, resembling a walking exhibition of glitch art. The designer has innovatively adopted a beveled neckline design. The fluorescent blue lining and the sound wave patterns of the luminous neck chain form an energy circuit. When the electronic musical notes slide down from the collarbone, the sound wave chain will light up with rippling light spots. Holographic cherry blossoms continuously float out from the modified long sleeves, and each petal carries the binary code of "Senbonzakura," generating fluorescent totems upon landing.
The gradient skirt-pants of the lower body use magnetic levitation cutting-piece technology. When the front hem is lifted, the dynamic digital prints on the leg-wraps are revealed—countless Q-version images of Hatsune Miku are holding a mini fireworks festival. The note-shaped belt buckle has a built-in induction chip, which changes the neon color according to the wearer's humming. When the melody of "Tell Your World" plays, the fluorescent blue immediately switches to a rainbow spectrum.
The accessory system is like a walking light-pollution device: when the folding round fan is unfolded, the projection of Hatsune Miku on the fan surface will wink at the camera; the neon-tube twin tails have 128 sets of LED modules inside, and the mini fireworks at the hair tips automatically change the cheering patterns every half an hour; the sound-wave bracelet on the wrist is linked with the sound field at the concert site, and it is currently changing from cyan-blue to the blazing red dedicated for cheering.
The most amazing part is the pair of concept-style geta. Active fluorescent particles are sealed inside the acrylic platform, and it's like stepping on and shattering a galaxy when walking. When Hatsune Miku steps onto the main stage of the festival, the fiber-optic straps immediately enter a crazy flashing mode. Combined with the leg-wrap prints that are faintly visible under the skirt, she turns into a human-shaped, self-walking neon sign.
This cross-dimensional outfit not only retains the flowing beauty of the yukata but also materializes the virtual characteristics of the electronic singer through technologies such as holographic projection, smart fabrics, and inductive light sources. When Hatsune Miku swings her neon twin tails and turns around, the traditional shimenawa rope collides with cyber codes in the night sky. What explodes is not sparks but the entire next-generation summer reverie.
When the holographic fireworks explode in the digital night sky, the festival of electronic beings kicks off. Hatsune Miku arrives, treading on the neon lights in a special cyber yukata. This battle-suit, jointly created by the V-family Laboratory and the Future Kimono Workshop, brings the aesthetics of the collision between tradition and technology to the extreme.
The blue-green gradient silk on the upper body is like a frozen aurora. The pixel wave dots on the shoulders leave data-stream afterimages as she moves, resembling a walking exhibition of glitch art. The designer has innovatively adopted a beveled neckline design. The fluorescent blue lining and the sound wave patterns of the luminous neck chain form an energy circuit. When the electronic musical notes slide down from the collarbone, the sound wave chain will light up with rippling light spots. Holographic cherry blossoms continuously float out from the modified long sleeves, and each petal carries the binary code of "Senbonzakura," generating fluorescent totems upon landing.
The gradient skirt-pants of the lower body use magnetic levitation cutting-piece technology. When the front hem is lifted, the dynamic digital prints on the leg-wraps are revealed—countless Q-version images of Hatsune Miku are holding a mini fireworks festival. The note-shaped belt buckle has a built-in induction chip, which changes the neon color according to the wearer's humming. When the melody of "Tell Your World" plays, the fluorescent blue immediately switches to a rainbow spectrum.
The accessory system is like a walking light-pollution device: when the folding round fan is unfolded, the projection of Hatsune Miku on the fan surface will wink at the camera; the neon-tube twin tails have 128 sets of LED modules inside, and the mini fireworks at the hair tips automatically change the cheering patterns every half an hour; the sound-wave bracelet on the wrist is linked with the sound field at the concert site, and it is currently changing from cyan-blue to the blazing red dedicated for cheering.
The most amazing part is the pair of concept-style geta. Active fluorescent particles are sealed inside the acrylic platform, and it's like stepping on and shattering a galaxy when walking. When Hatsune Miku steps onto the main stage of the festival, the fiber-optic straps immediately enter a crazy flashing mode. Combined with the leg-wrap prints that are faintly visible under the skirt, she turns into a human-shaped, self-walking neon sign.
This cross-dimensional outfit not only retains the flowing beauty of the yukata but also materializes the virtual characteristics of the electronic singer through technologies such as holographic projection, smart fabrics, and inductive light sources. When Hatsune Miku swings her neon twin tails and turns around, the traditional shimenawa rope collides with cyber codes in the night sky. What explodes is not sparks but the entire next-generation summer reverie.