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Japanese fashion fad tailored by inmates

MARI YAMAGUCHI

TOKYO The Associated Press

Japan's latest trendy fashion comes from a place most high-end shoppers wouldn't go looking: a jailhouse.

The must-have apparel – cotton aprons, tote bags and pouches – is emblazoned with the character for “jail” inside a circle and are cut, sewn and assembled by inmates at Hakodate Juvenile Prison on the northern island of Hokkaido.

The items first went on sale in October 2006 as souvenirs for tourists and prison visitors but did not immediately catch on.

The line's popularity picked up last year when a government-backed corrections association began to carry the logo at its Tokyo outlet store, said Shoji Nakajima, an official at the Correctional Association for Prison Industry Co-operation.

With orders flooding in on the association's Internet shopping site, all items are sold out. The popularity has been so great the association is planning to register the logo – designed by a prison official – with the patent office, Mr. Nakajima said.

“We thought the character for 'jail' would turn people off, but that turned out to be the big appeal,” Mr. Nakajima said. “Especially, young people seem to like it.”

The association also sells hundreds of other items, ranging from furniture and portable shrines to tea cups and green tea, produced by more than 81,000 inmates at 70 Japanese prisons as part of compulsory prison labour.

Many inmates are assigned to unskilled labour such as assembling shopping bags and envelopes, but Mr. Nakajima said he hoped Hakodate's success can be a good lesson for other prisons to become more creative.

The Hakodate inmates do not get any bonus from the booming sales and any proceeds will be used to fund the labour program, he added.

Aprons with the striking logo – which go for about ¥1,260 ($12) – have grabbed fans at a bar in Tokyo's bustling entertainment district of Shinjuku, where a manager and two waitresses regularly wear them.

“Our customers have said the design is cool, despite what the logo means. They often ask where they can find them,” the bar manager Mariko Yoshida, said. “It's good quality, too.”

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