Decora Clothing
Filter
0 results
20
- 10
- 15
- 20
- 25
- 30
- 50
Best selling
- Featured
- Best selling
- Alphabetically, A-Z
- Alphabetically, Z-A
- Price, low to high
- Price, high to low
- Date, old to new
- Date, new to old
Sort
Sort by:
- Featured
- Best selling
- Alphabetically, A-Z
- Alphabetically, Z-A
- Price, low to high
- Price, high to low
- Date, old to new
- Date, new to old
Showing 0 of 0 products
No products found
Use fewer filters or clear all
Decora clothing is a maximalist Japanese street fashion style defined by layering bright, clashing colors with an overwhelming abundance of plastic clips, cartoon accessories, printed pieces, and kitschy embellishments all worn simultaneously. In this collection you'll find the core building blocks of the look: pastel-drenched babydoll tops, printed tees, layered tulle skirts, colorful legwarmers, and statement outerwear that reads like a toy store exploded in the best possible way. If you've been hunting for genuine decora fashion that actually commits to the chaos rather than watering it down, this is the right place.
How to Style
Build a classic decora outfit by starting with a white or pastel babydoll top tucked into a bright-colored circle skirt, then layer a printed zip-up hoodie over it left open — the contrast of cutesy prints against solid color is foundational to the style. Add striped or solid-color legwarmers over your tights and finish with chunky colorful sneakers or Mary Janes from the Decora Shoes & Boots collection; the whole look should be loaded top to bottom with as many Decora hair clips and accessories as your hair and wrists can physically hold.
For a cooler-weather decora fit, layer a bright oversized long-sleeve tee over a collared shirt in a contrasting color, paired with wide-leg printed Decora pants in yellow or acid green — the baggier silhouette still lets you stack ankle socks, legwarmers, and chunky shoes without losing that intentional overflow of color and texture. If your decora wardrobe leans into softer pastel territory, pulling pieces from Fairy Kei clothing like cloud-print sweaters or lavender bloomers can blend both aesthetics in a way that actually works, especially when unified by the sheer volume of accessories.
✦
What You'll Find
Babydoll tops, oversized printed tees, collared shirts, zip-up hoodies, circle skirts, tulle layering skirts, wide-leg pants, and colorful outerwear in maximalist prints and solid brights
Cotton-blend jerseys, polyester-mix printed fabrics, tulle, fleece hoodies, and lightweight woven cottons — generally machine-washable and practical for heavy accessory layering
Sizing typically runs XS through XL with some pieces available in extended sizes; always check individual product measurements as Japanese sizing tends to run small relative to Western standards
Pieces here span a wide range of price points — you can assemble a solid decora base outfit without spending a fortune, which is part of what makes the style so accessible compared to lolita or visual kei.
✦
FAQ
Decora is a Japanese street fashion style that originated in Harajuku in the late 1990s, characterized by layering extremely colorful clothing and covering the body with as many plastic hair clips, cartoon accessories, and kitschy ornaments as possible — more is always more in this style.
Start with bright, solid-color or simply printed base pieces like a babydoll top and a circle skirt, then add layers — legwarmers, a hoodie, mismatched socks — and pile on as many colorful hair clips, wristbands, and character accessories as you can; the accessory volume is what defines the look more than any single clothing item.
Decora prioritizes maximum color clash, plastic accessories, and visual overload across all color families, while fairy kei focuses more specifically on soft pastel palettes, 1980s toy nostalgia, and a dreamier, gentler silhouette — the two styles can overlap but decora is louder and less color-restricted.
Most decora clothing follows Japanese sizing conventions, which typically run one to two sizes smaller than US or EU equivalents — always measure your bust, waist, and hips and compare against the specific garment's size chart before ordering.