A guide to the Japanese label born inside the Issey Miyake group, the designer who built it, and the ZUCCa slouch boots that turned its archive into a hunt.
Who is Akira Onozuka and what is the connection with ZUCCa?
Before we start — same name, different people
When you search “Akira Onozuka” on Google, two names pop up. One is the fashion designer 小野塚秋良. The other is a musical artist, 小野塚晨, who shares the same English romanization “Akira Onozuka.”
Same romanization, different kanji (秋良 vs 晨), two careers. Everything below is about the fashion designer 小野塚秋良.
Akira Onozuka’s timeline: the designer behind ZUCCa
Why ZUCCa ends with a lowercase “a”
- Brand name origin: ZUCCa = nickname of “Onozuka” (オノヅカ → ZUCCa). The lowercase final “a” is intentional, designed by Katsumi Komagata (One Stroke). People often misspell the brand as ZUCCA, zucca, zuka, or Zukka.
- Two parallel labels under one creative roof (1995–present): ZUCCa (mainline womenswear) and CABANE de ZUCCa (men’s plus accessories/watches; CABANE de ZUCCa is also a clothing store located in Tokyo).
- Sub-lines historically: ZUCCa TRAVAIL (1994, France-made workwear), HAKUÏ (1992, professional uniforms), school uniforms (1992 with Ozaki Shoji), Zucca DAYZ (younger-skewing line by Rikako Nagashima, c. 2014, designed by Schemata Architects’ Jo Nagasaka).
- Parent company A-net Inc. — the Issey-Miyake-group incubator established Aug 1996. Sister brands include Mercibeaucoup (mercibeaucoup,), Tsumori Chisato (closed 2022), tac:tac, ne Quittez pas, and Final Home.
- Awards: 1990 Mainichi Fashion Grand Prix (8th), 1990 FECJ (34th), 2004 1er Trophée Élan.
Function, comfort, and the ZUCCa spirit
Before starting ZUCCa, Akira Onozuka spent fourteen years at the Issey Miyake Design Studio, from 1974 to 1988. He was there during an important period for Miyake, when the idea of “A Piece of Cloth” was changing how clothes could move around the body. But when Onozuka launched his own brand, he did not simply repeat Miyake’s dramatic pleats. He took that same understanding of shape, fabric, and movement, and brought it into everyday wear.
ZUCCa was founded in 1988 with a simple idea: workwear could be practical, comfortable, and still feel refined. As part of the A-net family, the brand became known for its urban-uniform style. ZUCCa reached its peak influence in the late 2000s by mastering the “Industrial Slouch” — not just a trend but a technical achievement. This approach also shaped ZUCCa footwear: by applying Japanese draping techniques to shoes, Onozuka used heavy, high-grade leather to create boots that draped like fabric, defining the silhouette of Tokyo street style.
It is for people who care about construction, comfort, and clothes that become part of daily life.
That is why ZUCCa still feels special today. It is not a brand built on hype.
One of a kind, like every ZUCCa boot
Once a photo goes viral, copies always appear. We have seen cheap versions and fast-fashion brands try to imitate the ZUCCa boot shape. They look completely different and they never feel the same.
A buckle can be copied. The feeling cannot.
Many copies use stiff synthetic materials that feel like plastic and become uncomfortable fast. Original ZUCCa shoes are different. They are made with soft natural leather that moves with your feet. You can feel it in the weight of the hardware, the balance of the sole, and the way the leather has aged over time.
A new pair is only the beginning. The rest comes from being worn. Every step, bend, warm day, rainy street, and change of city leaves a small trace. After 15 or 20 years, the creases and color changes are not flaws — they are part of the boot’s life.
That is why we see ZUCCa boots as pieces to keep, not replace. The leather is soft enough for everyday wear, but the shape still changes the whole mood of an outfit. With simple leather care, these boots do not just get older.
They get better.
Our favorite ZUCCa Boots Overviews
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3 Buckles Slouch BootsSlouch boots with three buckle details. Super soft vintage genuine leather, many ways to wear. Adjustable three buckles/belts to make desired width. Often comes in Black or Brown. Size S/M/L.
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Iconic Archival Knee-High Boots (FW 2008)Iconic archival boots from the ZUCCa Fall/Winter 2008 runway. These boots offer limitless styling options: wear them as sleek over-the-knee boots, fold the tops over, or push them down for a heavy, effortless slouch. Often comes in Black or Brown. Size S/M/L.
- Suede Double Belts BootsSuede double belts boots with zipper details on the inside and wooden heels. Often comes in Dark Green / Black / Beige. Size S/M/L.
We are constantly hunting for these boots just for you! To catch the next pair, please keep an eye on our Instagram. We always share a preview there before these treasures officially hit the site. <3
Taro’s Wish ZUCCa Collection
Our curation doesn’t stop at footwear. ZUCCa’s ready-to-wear is just as distinct, defined by complex asymmetric cuts, deconstructed tailoring, and mixed-media fabrics. The signature ruched details do more than decorate — they add a sophisticated, avant-garde edge to everyday staples.
We’re constantly exploring the ZUCCa archives to highlight the singular pieces that define the label’s avant-garde legacy.
|・ω・)ノ ta-da! meet our Zucca collectionFrom archive gem to modern favorite
The renewed interest in ZUCCa also comes from how people discover vintage fashion now. In the last few years, ZUCCa boots have appeared more often on TikTok, Pinterest, and Xiaohongshu, usually alongside tags like archive fashion, Y2K shoes, and slouch boots. Their enduring appeal lies in a rare versatility, effortlessly pivoting between chic whimsy and dark, avant-garde sophistication.
There is a practical reason for the attention too. Japanese designer archive pieces are back in focus, especially labels connected to Issey Miyake, Comme des Garçons, Junya Watanabe, and Yohji Yamamoto. At the same time, ZUCCa boots are getting harder to find. Their signature slouch silhouette has become the definitive blueprint for the current global return to slouchy footwear, bridging the gap between rare vintage treasures and modern style.
References & further reading
- Japanese Wikipedia entry for 小野塚秋良 — the canonical chronology.
- Fashion Press — ZUCCa brand page — Japanese-press ground truth.
- HAKUÏ — Onozuka’s current uniform-brand designer page.
- Brutus — Onozuka on workwear and HAKUÏ.
- The Fashion Post — HAKUÏ 30周年.
- WWD Japan — Kengo Baba appointment (SS 2026).
- Fashionsnap — Baba appointment.
- A-net official announcement, Baba appointment.
- Rakuten Fashion Week Tokyo — ZUCCa brand statement under Baba.
- ZUCCa SS 2026 lookbook.
- Offbrand Library — Zucca 1988–1998 book (Mark Borthwick, Paolo Roversi).
- One Stroke — ZUCCa logo by Katsumi Komagata.
- Schemata Architects — CABANE de ZUCCa Daikanyama.

