Thursday 7th of May 2026

Nairobi, Kenya

Common Threads Contemporary African Fashion

Meet the new generation of African creatives taking the continent’s textile culture into the future. Helen Jennings reports.

 “Cloth is to Africans what monuments are to Westerners… Their capacity and application to commemorate events, issues, persons, and objectives outside of themselves are so immense.” El Anatsui, 2005

These wise words from Ghana’s most celebrated fine artist sum up Africa’s gloriously storied textile heritage, which not only speaks to generations of artisanal mastery but also to the significant cultural communication performed with a cloth across the continent. And over recent decades, African fashion designers have elevated these treasures still further through their designs. Early pioneers include Shade Thomas-Fahm who revolutionized Nigerian fashion in the 1960s by using handwoven aso-oke. In the 1980s, Malian Chris

Seydou was the first designer to consider bògòlanfini mud cloth. And in 1990s Ghana, Kofi Ansah modernized ceremonial kente cloth.

Today many heritage fabrics face being lost as older generations of makers pass on. This does not mean, however, as commonly believed, that African fabric and weaving traditions belong to the past, unchanging relics of a by-gone era. In fact, they remain ever-evolving tools for creating employment, empowerment, and innovation.

For example, the Ethical Fashion Initiative, a program of the International Trade Centre, works with co-ops in several countries to finance their valuable skills, whether silk screening, sewing, dying, or weaving, and develop ethical supply chains.

But it is the current generation of sought-after African designers and entrepreneurs who are the ones using new thinking to take ancient textiles into the future. In Nigeria, Emmanuel Okoro of Emmy Kasbit focuses on re-imagining akwete, a loom-woven cloth made by Igbo women in eastern Nigeria. “There are over 100 traditional motifs and it’s said that each one came to its maker from the spirits in their dreams,” says Okoro. “For me, it comes down to preserving the culture of our forefathers in a modern way. Storytelling is at the forefront of putting African fashion on the global stage, so we cannot tell our stories with western fabrics.”

Each season, the Lagos-based designer develops his own patterns based on Nsibidi hieroglyphics and then delivers his yarns and designs to his cherished weavers. His boldly tailored men’s and women’s looks for SS21 speak to ideas of unity and strength and were debuted at Vogue Italia Talents during Milan Fashion Week. “I’m interested in community upliftment and boosting a craft that had become forgotten,” he adds. “I want to see these women win, and I’m letting the world know that this is what African luxury looks like.”

Fellow Nigerian Nkwo Onwuka’s approach is informed by her interest in ethical fashion. The Abuja-based designer has developed dakala, a handmade cloth made from denim offcuts. “Nigeria has a lot of markets trading in second-hand garments and a strong culture of clothing being made by small-scale manufacturers and dressmakers, which results in a huge amount

of textile waste,” Onwuka explains. “I started to see how I could prevent dead stock and old clothes from ending up in landfills or being incinerated by using them as a raw material. Through experimentation, I developed a technique of stripping, braiding, and sewing together textile waste to form a new fabric that has the look and feel of our traditional woven fabrics.”

Dakala was shortlisted for the Design Museum’s Beazley Designs of the Year 2020 award and her studio continues to develop the technique with the next step being a loom-spun version. Her current collection, entitled No Planet B, features ponchos and apron corsets made from multiple strings of dakala. “For me, success is making sure that I can take care of everyone in my small circle with the hope that this care ripples

out to form a larger circle,” she says. “I want to make sure that each person feels valued. The community has to be the fuel that fires what we do.”

Johannesburg-based designer Thebe Magugu is embracing the latest technology to create experiential fabrications from ancient inspirations. The 2019 LVMH Award winner is passionate about investing his directional yet elegant womenswear with cultural value.

For example, his clothing labels are fitted with microchips. “If any smartphone taps them, it opens a webpage that showcases the story of the collection as well as photographs of everyone involved in the making of the garment, from the fabric weavers in Cape Town to the tailors in Joburg. I love the full transparency and the idea of bringing culture and technology together,” he says.

For his AW21 collection, entitled Alchemy, Magugu immersed himself in African spirituality, which led to a collaboration with traditional healer Noentla Khumalo for his headline print featuring the tools of her trade – goat knuckles, a police whistle, pencil sharpener, red dice, and shells. “Noentla, who uses various objects as her medium to communicate with the ancestors, threw these objects onto a straw mat, which were then photographed, abstracted, and printed onto wool suiting. Before she threw the bones, Noentla asked ‘What now?’ and what lays on this garment is the answer.”

The rising star, who’s currently shortlisted for The Woolmark 2021 Prize, also worked with South African eco-printmaker Larissa Don who used cannabis and imphepho (the plant healers burn during their ceremonies) to transfer botanical prints onto merino wool. “It is about the idea of modernity through the indigenous,” he adds. “Wool is one of the most sophisticated fabrics available – from its odour-absorbing properties and natural heat-management to its inherent sense of luxury, which all speak to the unparalleled power of the natural world.”

While bright ideas in the high fashion space abound, there remain steep challenges facing more widely available fashion fabrics due to the lack of textile manufacturing facilities on the continent. The industry dwindled in the 1990s in the face of international competition including hugely popular

wax print fabrics from Europe. While infrastructure is surely improving today, there is still far to go. This is an area Kenyan fashion curator Sunny Dolat is addressing.

“As Africans, we have been lucky to be born into a wealth of textile culture. I believe we have a duty to grow and add to this heritage,” says Dolat, who is co-founder of The Nest Collective and creative business incubator, the HEVA Fund. “Many parts of Africa still have communities, albeit reduced, of spinners, weavers, and dyers who carry this cultural memory in their hands. The work I’m exploring now seeks to marry these sustainable practices with contemporary insights, ideas, and materials, which I believe could support many artisans across the continent.”

Due to Kenya’s colonial history, the country’s homegrown textile heritage is severely diminished compared to other parts of Africa. This fact is what originally stirred Dolat to take action. “All the textiles that we have are versions of textiles from other cultures. Maasai shuka blankets came from Scottish missionaries, kikoi is an update on an Omani wrapper, and kanga is based on the Portuguese lenço scarf. They all started off being made locally but, as with most things, much of it is now brought in from Asia. This got me thinking, what could a truly Kenyan textile look like?”

Dolat visited artisanal communities around the country to research organic dyes and fibers and then moved on to developing a new visual language with graphic designers Lulu

Kitolo and Monica Obaga. The result is Nanga (Swahili for anchor), a range of prints inspired by Kenya’s natural and urban landscapes, which have been produced on silk, chiffon, and cotton and are entering Nairobi’s downtown fabric stores this year. “We’re not going to announce them or give them to designers. Instead, we’re putting them in the mass market to see if they sell. That would be the true measure of success.”

He cites Green Nettle as a benchmark for the kind of new approach that could take African fashion innovation to the next level.

This Kenyan start-up won the H&M Foundation Global Change Award for its environmentally-friendly fabric made from nettles – a plant that thrives in even the most barren areas of the country. “My hope is that more designers

and companies begin to develop their own interventions into the textiles. Last year, the pandemic disrupted everyone’s access to textiles overnight. This taught us not to rely on imports and many found local alternatives instead. It would be amazing if that way of working can continue to be fostered and grow.”

Content Courtesy of TL Magazine & NFH 

African Development Bank’s Fashionomics Africa, Partners, Launch New Sustainable Fashion Competition With $6,000 in Cash Prizes

The African Development Bank Fashionomics Africa initiative’s second online competition is offering $6,000 total in cash prizes, mentoring, new branding packages, and other support for winning African designers of sustainable and circular fashion.

Fashionomics Africa, in collaboration with the United Nations Environment Programme, Parsons School of Design, strategic consulting and communications agency BPCM, and the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, invite interested African fashion brands to apply to the sustainable fashion online competition. Entrants must be pursuing environmentally friendly measures, sustainability, and circular economy actions to qualify. The designer or design team submitting the “best sustainable design” will win $3,000 along with other prizes. Two other competition finalists will take home $1,500 each, plus other support.

The competition celebrates African fashion brands that will change how we produce, buy, use and recycle fashion and that encourage a more sustainable shift in consumer practices.

“Sustainability is the present, not the distant or even the near future. It is where we are now, and it is vital that we open our eyes to what the fashion industry already has to offer. By embracing the industry’s existing resources, we are promoting circularity at the most fundamental level,” said Amel Hamza, Acting Director for Gender, Women and Civil Society at the African Development Bank.

“With the second edition of the Fashionomics Africa contest, the Bank aims to continue highlighting the ingenuity that African fashion designers consistently demonstrate through the strength of their culture and heritage,” she added.

The textile and fashion industry accounts for nearly 2% to 8% of global carbon emissions, the sector ranks as the world’s second-largest industrial polluter after the oil sector, according to the United Nations Environment Programme. However, this industry also provides important levels of employment, foreign exchange revenue, and products essential to human welfare.

The competition targets textile, apparel, and accessories entrepreneurs from Africa, aged 18 years or older, who have launched fashion businesses (up to a maximum of 50 employees), and whose sustainable designs have been produced within the last five years. Qualifying applicants will submit pictures of their products, detail their sustainable business model, and explain how their startup is environmentally friendly and innovative.

Examples of sustainability and circularity elements might include materials used, the design process, cleaner or greener production processes – including shipping methods or ways to reduce carbon footprint.

A five-person judging panel representing the African Development Bank and competition collaborators will announce the three finalists by 22 March 2022. The finalists’ entries will be posted on the Fashionomics Africa digital marketplace and mobile application for a public vote between 22 March 2022 and 7 April 2022. Polls close on 7 April at 23:59 GMT.

In addition to the cash prize, the winning fashion brand will receive a certificate and the opportunity to showcase its creation by taking part in online events and sharing insights on key sustainability challenges facing the industry. The winner will have access to a network of media insiders and industry experts and receive mentoring and networking opportunities from competition collaborators.

To learn more about the Fashionomics Africa online competition or to submit an entry, click here. Applications must be received by 1 March 2022 at 23:59 GMT.

Fashionomics Africa is an African Development Bank initiative increasing Africa’s participation in the global textile and fashion industry value chains.

Content Courtesy of Fashionomics Africa & NFH

South African Fashion Week Announces New Talent Search Finalists

South African Fashion Week has announced the six finalists of the 2022 New Talent Search. Competing in the country’s most prestigious fashion award for rising stars are:

• Thando Ntuli – MUNKUS • Nichole Smith – Ipikoko • Mikhile du Plessis – MeKay Designs • Calvin Lunga Cebekhulu – Czene.24 • Sanelisiwe Gcabashe – Gjenelo Couture • Mimangaliso Ndiko – Sixx6

Now in its 24th year, the winner will be announced on the 28th of April during the SAFW Spring Summer 22 Collections where the selected designers will feature their signature entries together with the debut capsule collection of the 2021 winner, Artho Eksteen.

The overall winner will receive R20 000.00 prize money towards developing their debut collection as well as a free runway show at SAFWSS 23 to launch this collection.

According to the SAFW director, Lucilla Booyzen, all the participating finalists are winners because the platform’s visibility to the media and fashion buyers ensures the national and international exposure that allows any fledgling career to gain the necessary entrepreneurial traction.

SAFW’s New Talent Search has consistently unearthed future talent and served as a launchpad for many of the local industry’s most respected names since its inception in 1998. These include MmusoMaxwell, Jacques Bam, Fikile Zamagcino Sokhulu, Michael Ludwig Studio, Saint Vuyo, and Sipho Mbuto.

Content Courtesy of  Fashion United & NFH

Noni Styles Celebrates African Fashions and Fabrics

Noni Styles is a unique and trendy African fashion line that offers ready-to-wear and custom-made attires for women, men, and children. It was founded by Nonye Anyadiegwu, also known as “Noni,” in 2001.

Noni was born in Lagos, Nigeria, and was one of eight children. She came to the United States when she was 18 years old to pursue a college education. Noni had always had a passion for fashion and knew that she would want to be a fashion designer as an adult. After college and securing a few prominent corporate jobs, Noni decided it was time to pursue her dreams. She opened up her first business, an African clothing store called “Noni,” to the public in Brooklyn, NY.

The vision behind “Noni” is to merge the rich, colorful, and vibrant patterns of African fabrics and designs with the contemporary style of the western world. Noni’s goal is to dress her customers in a way that will make them look and feel like royalty in every sense of the word.

Content courtesy of Noni Style & NFH

Meet the Top 20 Finalists Competing at Future Face Africa’s Grand Finale

After a thorough rigorous vetting process, 20 models have been selected as finalists to compete at Future Face Africa‘s grand finale, which takes place at Eko Hotels & Suites on Sunday, the 30th of January 2022.

This maiden competition proves to be a remarkable one as models from eight African countries plus thousands of digital applications worldwide compete for a chance to win the title of Africa’s next future face. Two winners will emerge from the 20 finalists. They will each receive a two-year international modeling contract with a top international modeling agency, as well as a cash prize of five thousand dollars.

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The FFA project is spearheaded by none other than Elizabeth Isiorho, a pioneer in the African modeling industry and the founder of Beth Model Management Africa, Africa’s largest modeling agency, and the organization behind Future Face Africa. Over the past 17 years, Beth Model Management has served as an industry pacesetter, helping to launch the careers of dozens of internationally placed models, and has cultivated some of the best talents in the industry, such as Mayowa Nicholas and Davidson Obennebo.

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FFA will be equipping selected models with the knowledge and skills to achieve international success and to have long-lasting careers in a very competitive industry. Models participating in the FFA will have the chance to change their lives forever through a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity.

Here are the 20 FFA finalists (divided into male and female categories) competing at the grand finale:

1. Ana Campos

2. Ebiere Macaulay

3. Winifred Esi Sam

4. Eleanor Musangi

5. Juliana T Rugumisa

6. Kimberly Martha Amanya Ngabirano

7. Blessing Endurance

8. Nze Sandra chinecherem

9. Lerah James

10. Oluchi Diamonds

1. Nziza Ken

2. Eneh Michael

3. Akinsiku Chukwuka David

4. Awoliyi Mayowa

5. Ohanado Ikechukwu

6. Alokpesi Frank

7. Okonkwo Sunday Chibueze

8. Echetama Wilson Elochukwu

9. Dike Alex Emmanuel chinweotito

Content courtesy of Future Face Africa 

Don’t Miss Future Face Africa’s Grand Finale This Weekend

After physical castings in eight African countries and thousands of digital applications worldwide, Future Face Africa‘s grand finale will take place at Eko Hotels & Suites on Sunday the 30th of January 2022.

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Two contestants will win the title of Africa’s next future face, and the two winners will each receive a two-year international modeling contract with a top international modeling agency, as well as a USD 5,000 cash prize. In addition to providing a career start in modeling, the competition also prepares the winners for global competition.

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Championed by former model Elizabeth Elohor, whose agency Beth Modelling Agency has groomed and raised a plethora of successful models through initiatives like Elite Model Look Africa, which offered African models the pivotal push needed both internationally and locally. We can expect an outstanding evening with top celebrities, prominent players in the Nigerian fashion industry, models, and more coming out for a night of glitz and glamour.

For tickets reservations call
07069999919, 08069748761

Content Courtesy Of Future Face Africa 

Future Face Africa, Africa’s Largest Model Search Competition, Prepares For A Grand Finale

Future Face Africa, Africa’s largest model search competition, is preparing for its grand finale event in Lagos. After a rigorous selection process involving physical castings in eight African countries, as well as thousands of digital applications from all over the world, the Future Face Africa judges have selected 18 finalists who will be flown into Lagos for a shot at turning their modeling aspirations into a reality.

The grand finale event will be taking place on Sunday, January 30, 2022, at Eko Hotel & Suites, where models will be competing for a chance to win a 2-year modeling contract with a top international modeling agency, as well as a $5,000 USD cash prize.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CZPUec0qPP6/?utm_source=ig_embed

The FFA project is spearheaded by none other than Elizabeth Isiorho, a pioneer in the African modeling industry and the founder of Beth Model Management Africa, Africa’s largest modeling agency, and the organization behind Future Face Africa. Over the past 17 years, Beth Model Management has served as an industry pacesetter, helping to launch the careers of dozens of internationally placed models, and has cultivated some of the best talents in the industry, such as Mayowa Nicholas and Davidson Obennebo.

Elizabeth Isiorho previously organized Elite Model Look Nigeria, but after a 2-year hiatus, re-emerged with Future Face Africa to expand her model search beyond the borders of Nigeria alone, and offer a wider range of hopefuls a chance at success. FFA will be giving opportunities to people from various countries, backgrounds, and skin tones, aiming to go beyond the buzzwords of “diversity” and “inclusivity” to create an initiative that truly celebrates the range of beauty that the industry has to offer.

https://www.instagram.com/reel/CZUlildo5Gw/?utm_source=ig_embed

FFA will be equipping selected models with the knowledge and skills to achieve international success and to have long-lasting careers in a very competitive industry. For these models, Future Face Africa will be a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity that could change their lives forever.

Future Face Africa is proudly sponsored by Ecobank, Aquafina, MAC, Haute Couture, and Natures Gentle Touch.

Content Courtesy Of  Future Face Africa

Lukhanyo Mdingi Debuts His AW22 Collection at Paris Fashion Week

Multi-award-winning South African designer Lukhanyo Mdingi is starting the new year on a high note as he launches his Autumn/Winter 2022 collection in Paris.
Mdingi was set to debut the Bodyland AW22 collection at Paris Fashion Week on Tuesday, January 18.

In this collection, he wants to celebrate the human hands that work tirelessly in creating different designs.
Emerging menswear designers showing in Paris this month have faced difficult choices in the countdown to the Autumn/Winter 2022 season.

When the Federation de la Haute Couture et de la Mode announced a go-head for Paris Fashion Week Men (18–23 January), it was easy enough for major luxury brands to mobilize their resources. With limited funds, emerging designers, however, have had to calculate carefully. While foreign emerging designers have been wary of the costs of physical shows, home-grown designers based in Paris have generally been ready to plow ahead.

While Parisian brands can plan physical shows in uncertain times and develop contingency plans, international young designers showing at Paris Fashion Week have had to get creative to present their Autumn/Winter 2022 collections. It’s one of many hurdles for the new generation of men’s designers who still see Paris and Milan as worthwhile.

Rhuigi Villasenor, the 29-year-old founder of LA label Rhude and newly announced creative director of Swiss heritage brand Bally, was originally excited to show in Paris this season for the first time since the pandemic. When he launched his brand in 2015, making hoodies and T-shirts, he considered Paris “the main stage” of fashion, inspired as a child by flipping through magazines he couldn’t afford in the bookstore, Barnes & Noble.

However, a flip-flopping of travel restrictions and rising Omicron cases forced the designer to reconsider. “Weeks ago we were planning to go to Paris and show. We were looking at venues and the production. And then in just a matter of days, I decided to pivot,” he says. “Taking off my designer cap and putting my CEO cap on, it’s quite a big expense for me not to have the certainty whether we’ll be able to even actually show, let alone have an audience. I had to make the proper choices to pull back from a physical show and do something that feels a bit safer.”

Instead, Rhude has presented his collection digitally with an accompanying showroom, maintaining a laser-like focus on the clothes. Known for hoodies, T-shirts, and bold logo jackets retailing for up to $2,500, Villaseñor is looking to more classic styles for this season, says the designer, who aims to create what the new version of the power suit looks like for today’s Gen Z investor.

South African designer Lukhanyo Mdingi arrived in Paris on 13 January, just five days before his first-ever presentation at Paris Fashion Week, showcasing his bold artisanal and textured prints. Without a network of collaborators in Paris, the young designer found it tricky to organize the components of a fashion presentation, from venue to lighting.

“In South Africa, when you’re part of the fashion week, you pay a set fee and the whole production is pretty much-taken care of and includes hair, makeup, casting, and producers,” Mdingi says. “You walk in with your collection and that’s pretty much it.”

Mdingi, who founded his business in 2013, launched Ssense, and Net-a-Porter’s Vanguard program after Autumn/Winter 2021. He hopes his presentation and showroom will attract more stockists and further growth. Mdingi was invited to show at Paris Fashion Week after winning LVMH’s Karl Lagerfeld Prize 2021, shared with New York’s KidSuper and Shanghai brand Rui. Each designer received €150,000.

Physical shows, with extra, can work for local talent

Many of the menswear designers who are based in Paris have considered a physical show to be the right option. Florentin Glemarec and Kevin Nompeix, the duo behind gender-free brand Egonlab, showed on Monday, following their Pierre Bergé Prize win at Andam 2021. Running parallel to the show was Egomanati, a metaverse experience accessible via the brand’s website featuring NFTs from Egonlab, in collaboration with Crocs.

“I think for young brands, the physical show is an important thing because it’s a validation of our business,” says Nompeix. “We want a real show to meet people, to meet our community, to feel a real energy with the models a real experience.”

Egonlab built a strong online community during the pandemic, Nompeix says (the brand has over 90,000 Instagram followers). Now, as the brand broadens to include womenswear, the new show, and NFT activation are intended to provide a new marketing boost.

French designer Louis Gabriel Nouchi was also set on a show for AW22. Launched in 2017, the brand’s sales have doubled since 2020, bolstered by a store in Paris. Now, he’s keen to win stockists and further press attention with an in-person runway show on Saturday at Palais de Chaillot.

Nouchi’s show for Spring/Summer 2022, staged in July, was an easier challenge because it was held outdoors, he says. Despite the social distancing demands on guests and complex organizing backstage, he was still determined to proceed with AW22. “After making so many videos, it’s really complicated to transmit an emotion through digital,” he says. “Everybody’s going to watch it on their phone it’s not a movie screen. You lose a lot of the atmosphere and the immersive effects. For me, if we’re able to respect all the conditions, let’s do it!”

Pre-pandemic, designers had relative flexibility, confirming show venues three weeks before the event. Now, the lead time is closer to three months, Nouchi says. “It takes longer to source materials, and also we have to have a Plan B, Plan C, and Plan D.” The designer has planned a video and exhibition as backup ideas in the event that the physical fashion show is scuppered. “We’ve had to be very fluid in our planning,” he sighs. “It’s been like this for two years.”

Trialing new formats

For this season, the focus of Rhude’s Rhuigi Villasenor is on the clothes, contrasting with the star-studded show–party the brand held for SS22 in LA, which featured A-list celebrities and a champagne tower. Villaseñor wants to ensure the foundations of the business are solid before taking on new retailers or partnerships. “I’m championing the clothes and the design and the hard work that the team and I put in,” he says.

Rhude has maintained a year-on-year rapid growth rate of around 50 percent. It’s important to take stock at this juncture, says Villasenor. “It’s very easy to be dictated by the consumer. And then you end up on this train where you don’t have control.”

Egonlab’s metaverse project reflects how brands want to extend their online presence. “We want people to find refuge online,” Nompeix says. “You can move through and touch things, or walk through a door and find our collaboration with Crocs.” To date, Crocs has dabbled in the metaverse with the NBA and Minecraft, but this marks its first NFT project, says Yann Le Bozec, senior marketing director EMEA at Crocs. Egonlab reflects Crocs’ gender-free ethos, he adds.

Meanwhile, Lukhanyo Mdingi is strengthening a connection with the Ethical Fashion Initiative. Mdingi and his team went to Burkina Faso to meet artisans who create fabrics for their collections. After the visit, Mdingi decided to invite one of the artisans, Veronique Ouedraogo, to join him in Paris, participating in the presentation and meeting press and buyers.

“Being in that space and really understanding the provenance of the craft and the human beings behind it really ignited something within us,” Mdingi says. “That in itself will add a layer to understanding the genesis of the clothes. And help people recognize that there’s a human behind them.”

Key Takeaway: The pandemic is teaching emerging brands that physical fashion shows aren’t the only route to building brand awareness or winning stockists. Emerging designers are responding to the wants of their individual fanbases, to deliver unique collection experiences, from pared-back presentations to metaverse experiments and NFTs.

Content courtesy of Vogue Business, IOL & NFH

Fashion Is An Industry Capable Of Fundamental Economic Transformation For Africa

Fashion as the second-largest sector in the developing world after agriculture, the fashion, textile, and clothing industry has the potential to transform lives, particularly for women and youth. Global value chains are integral to inclusive growth across the world, and a clear indicator of economic transformation.

In Africa, despite this potential, challenges remain. The majority of fashion businesses across the continent are informal, with limited access to finance for growth and high costs of shipping and transportation of raw materials. But though there remains work to be done in strengthening the value chain of the African fashion industry, the rapidly rising awareness and recognition of our extraordinary creative talent on the global stage is something to be celebrated and nurtured.

This starts with our young people. Over 60% of our 1.25 billion population is currently under the age of 25, and by 2050 two in every five children will be born in Africa. This opportunity is staggering, and it is limitless. The task that we as educators always come down to is twofold: skills and jobs. Much has been written about this urgent need, but little is cited about fashion’s contribution to the mounting task.

The fashion industry is a creator and provider of meaningful employment. An industry encapsulating multiple vertical sectors and business skills, from manufacturing to retail, marketing to design. These are now powered by a global focus on sustainability and innovation, led by a more engaged youth stepping forth with courageous optimism towards building a better world. As we know, all the more important living amidst the shifting pandemic environment.

With 13 million young Africans joining the labor market every year, the development of labor-intensive sectors is imperative for a prosperous Africa. This is reflected in the African Development Bank’s initiative Fashionomics, launched in 2015 to promote investments in the fashion sector, increase access to finance for entrepreneurs and incubate and accelerate start-ups. As part of the African Union’s Agenda 2063, and in support of the recent African Continental Free Trade Agreement, this actively stimulates job creation in the fashion industry in Africa, heightening regional and global integration with the unique selling point of African culture and creativity.

Perhaps ahead of our time, we founded FEDISA Fashion School in 2005 shortly after the launch of the Woodstock Creative Hub, a booming transformation of a once dilapidated area of Cape Town, South Africa that now serves as an inspiration for arts, food, and crafts for local and international creatives. Now entering our 18th year with an additional campus in Sandton, our industry-leading institution has trained more than 1,000 young people in fashion and design tertiary education, providing them with work-ready skills for high-impact employability across the world.

FEDISA offers a range of specialized accreditations in a holistic approach to the business of fashion, connecting advertising, design, and marketing. This provides our graduates with a readiness for a variety of positions, whether they wish to be designers, entrepreneurs, creative directors, archivists, buyers, or marketing executives. The preparation of our exceptional young talent in Africa gives future professionals the ability to add value and expertise to the rapidly growing e-commerce sector in Africa, estimated to be worth $20 billion – supported by the rise in African consumer spending power.

An increasing focus on the theme of return from the African diaspora who seek authentic African-made apparel powers attention to digital innovation for creatives on the continent, who diligently drive to build a more reliable and well-equipped sector, capitalizing on extremely high mobile saturation rates through the use of social media and e-commerce platforms. Internationalization is a mission close to our own purpose, with our alumni representing over 34 countries – graduates who take the tailored, transformative education to their home countries along with globally relevant, African-centric design and creativity.

As we harness this movement into the FEDISA curriculum, we now embark on the next stage of our growth with an organization aligned in purpose. Becoming part of the pan-African Honoris United Universities network is a milestone moment for us at FEDISA, connecting us to the educational group’s 14 further world-class institutions across the continent and the collaborative intelligence of the 61,000+ students and 3,500+ faculty members.

As founders ourselves, one of the most anticipated areas of this new partnership is preparing students for entrepreneurship. At FEDISA, we do things a little differently, encouraging students and staff to continue side projects and businesses aligned to their passion for fashion and design. For our faculty, this means the application of what they are teaching is up-to-date, relevant, and innovative in today’s context. We could not have found a better partner to assist us in this mission, as Honoris continues to provide students with a competitive advantage in the world of work to allow them to succeed in the ever-changing, demanding, and increasingly digitized labor and start-up markets.

We believe in excellence and opportunity, in the power of moulding culture through the fabric and creating the limitless potential to transform lives. The fashion industry holds the considerable capacity to motivate and bring change to some of the most disadvantaged people, especially women and youth, and plays an important role in Africa’s economic revolution. Through the power of partnership, we can’t wait to do more alongside Honoris.

Content courtesy of How We Made It In Africa & NFH Digital Team 

Honey TV’s Wawu That’s My Dress Returns to Kenya for a Second Season

The popular format of the wedding show sees brides from all over the country descend on Nairobi to look for their perfect wedding dress. In the presence of their loved ones, they each have the chance to try on different dresses to determine which style suits them or not.

Kenyan Media Maven – Amina Abdi Rabar is back as the show’s host. Rabar is one of East Africa’s most popular celebrities with just over a million followers on Instagram alone. It brings spirit and a touch of modernity to the wedding fair. The Kenyan season is produced by Fareed Khimani’s Nusu-Nusu Productions.

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The wow, that’s my dress The format has traveled across the African continent having started in Nigeria with a famous stylist – Dami Oke as host, Kenya with Amina Abdi Rabar, and more recently Zambia with musician Esther Chungu as host. The show has become a popular format for the channel as a continuation of their focus on weddings in the lifestyle television format.

The bride’s dress is the centerpiece of any wedding and can make or break her day.
A Kenyan boutique is a hot spot for a bride who is looking for the perfect dress for her big day. Hosted by Amina Abdi, Wawu, That’s My Dress: Kenya follows all the activity at this boutique as brides and their loved ones swing by to meet the in-house team that is ready to help them find the perfect wedding dress.

Catch Amina Abdi Rabar on Wawu, That’s My Dress: Kenya and other pan-African lifestyle show on DStv’s HONEY channel (173).

Content courtesy of Honey TV & NFH Digital Team

Out of Africa and Onto Vogue: What’s the Story Behind British Vogue’s February Cover?

“It is about the elevation of a continent,” says Editor-In-Chief Edward Enninful of the landmark cover celebrating “a new generation of African supermodels”

At first glance, British Vogue’s February cover might seem jarring to some; the shadowy tableau of nine dark-skinned Black women, stone-faced and stiffly posed, almost evokes the feeling of mannequins arranged in a store window. Arguably, this might be exactly its intent: to present Black, dark-skinned beauty and unabashedly African features as aspirational rather than an anomaly as a standard, rather than a token.

“This is a celebration of women, of matriarchy, and of the beauty of Black women,” said photographer Rafael Pavarotti of the milestone. “They are the past, the present, and the future.”

The cover is Pavarotti’s first for British Vogue, as well as a first for several of the array of emerging African stars featured: Adut Akech, Amar Akway, Majesty Amare, Akon Changkou, Maty Fall, Janet Jumbo, Abény Nhial, Nyagua Ruea and Anok Yai.

“I saw all these incredible models from across Africa who were just so vivacious and smart,” explained British Vogue’s Editor-in-Chief and European Editorial Director Edward Enninful OBE, himself a dark-skinned British-Ghanaian. “These girls are redefining what it is to be a fashion model.”

While the shift is undeniably overdue, as we know, change is often hard, particularly for an industry that has long reinforced the marginalization of Black models and by extension, Black fashion lovers by simply declaring them not in vogue (pun intended).

“In the beginning, I felt really isolated…I got thrown into the modeling industry very quickly and I kind of had to navigate it on my own,” Yai, who was famously discovered at Howard University’s 2017 Homecoming and has since appeared in campaigns and on catwalks for luxury brands across the world, tells contributing editor Funmi Fetto.

“Backstage, there would maybe be one other Black girl, but now my tribe is backstage,” Yai added. “I can speak my own language to my friends. They are basically like my family.”

Top African supermodel Adut Akech garnered her own alternate cover for the February 2022 issue. Inside, the 22-year-old echoed Yai’s sentiments while reflecting on her own still-growing career.

“I would literally be the only Black, dark-skinned girl in the show. There were no Sudanese models, no African models,” she recalled. “Now, I go to a show and there are girls from my country, girls from Africa who look like me. So yes, there has been a huge change. It has gone from me being the only one at a show to 15 or 20 of us. I’m just so happy that we are finally at this place. I was tired of always feeling out of place and feeling like an outcast.”

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The cover undoubtedly marks a triumphant moment, but will the overdue inclusion prove to be just another fashion trend?

“You know, fashion tends to follow waves,” noted Enninful, who also styled the cover. “We’ve had the Brazilian wave. We had the Dutch wave, the Russian wave, the Eastern European wave…And while, in the last decade, the Black model has come to prominence, I love that we are finally giving more space to African beauty.”

The highly stylized looks created for the shoot were intended to exaggerate that beauty, reportedly drawing on influences ranging from The Supremes to the often poised and strategically posed portraits of West African photographers James Barnor and Malick Sidibé. Strikingly, the most direct reference is to Grace Jones’ legendary Nightclubbing album cover, on which the Jamaican-American icon appears almost ebonized as she stares piercingly into photographer Jean-Paul Goude’s lens.

“African women and their elegance are at the center of this beauty look,” explained make-up artist Ammy Drammeh, who is of Gambian-Spanish descent. “That elegance is innate, you know? They’re not trying, they just are.”

As the rest of the fashion world finally takes notice of that cover-worthy elegance, Enninful asserts that now, “We need to ensure these girls last. We have to invest in them, nurture them, and support them with editorial, with advertising, with shows. It has to be 360…Getting these girls and then throwing them away after one season? That has to stop.”

The February issue of British Vogue arrives on newsstands Tuesday, Jan. 18. The full cover story can be read online.

Content courtesy of British Vogue & NFH Digital Team

British Vogue’s Momentous All African Cover Spotlights 9 Young Women Redefining What It Is To Be A Model

With a new generation of African models in the spotlight, fashion is, at last, embracing what it is to be truly global. Funmi Fetto talks to some of those redrawing the map.

Photographs by Rafael Pavarotti. Styling by Edward Enninful.

It’s a grey, mild-for-November Tuesday morning, in a brutalist indoor car park off an industrial road within a not particularly fashionable enclave of west London. There’s a large table, methodically laid with lateral flow tests. One would be justified in thinking that this is not where the magic happens. But then, a door opens into a cavernous studio with dramatic black drapes. Inside, nine striking Black models – their facial features varied and distinct – await hair and make-up.

They are playfully conversing; I note snippets of Dinka and hints of other mother tongues peppering the conversation. They’re laughing and teasing one another while moving and mouthing the lyrics to Wizkid’s “Don’t Dull”, “Ojuelegba”, “Essence” and pretty much the entire tracklist of Made in Lagos. These women are a wholly different type of model and are currently pushing the boundaries not only of beauty but of the entire fashion world.

Adult, Anok, Nyagua, Janet Jumbo, Maty Fall, and co are representative of an ongoing seismic shift that became more pronounced on the spring/summer ’22 runways. Prada, Louis Vuitton, Balenciaga, Saint Laurent, Miu Miu, and many more were awash with dark-skinned models whose African heritage stretched from Senegal to Rwanda to Sudan to Nigeria to Ethiopia. For an industry long criticized for its lack of diversity, as well as for perpetuating beauty standards seen through a Eurocentric lens, this change is momentous.

“I saw all these incredible models from across Africa who were just so vivacious and smart,” recalls Edward Enninful, British Vogue’s editor-in-chief, and European editorial director, explaining the inspiration behind shooting an all-Black, all African cover. His excitement for this moment is tangible: “These girls,” he continues, “are redefining what it is to be a fashion model.”

 

This, he asserts, is well overdue. “You know, fashion tends to follow waves. We’ve had the Brazilian wave. We had the Dutch wave, the Russian wave, the Eastern European wave… And while, in the last decade, the Black model has come to prominence, I love that we are finally giving more space to African beauty.” Unlike the trends that have gone before, which favored a certain aesthetic – the perpetually sun-kissed Amazonian curves of the Brazilians, the strong jawlines of the Eastern Europeans – this African wave taps into a variety of aesthetics from across that vast continent.

Consider Adut Akech. At 22, she is arguably the most successful African model working today. Following her runway debut at Saint Laurent, in 2016, her international Vogue covers have run into double digits, she has notched up numerous fashion and beauty campaigns – from Valentino to Estée Lauder – and recently bought a house in LA. Undoubtedly she has inspired other African models, such as Janet Jumbo, the 19-year-old Nigerian who walked Louis Vuitton and Burberry and says the wave of success African models are riding right now “gives me hope that I can succeed at this”.

Akech, dressed in a toweling robe, her tousled hair redolent of a protagonist in a James Barnor photograph, recalls the landscape of five years ago as a world away from what we see now. “When I first started modeling internationally…” She makes a face, eyes incredulous and lets out a wry laugh. “I would literally be the only Black, dark-skinned girl in the show. There were no Sudanese models, no African models. Now,” she says, smiling, “I go to a show and there are girls from my country, girls from Africa who look like me. So yes, there has been a huge change. It has gone from me being the only one at a show to 15 or 20 of us. I’m just so happy that we are finally at this place. I was tired of always feeling out of place and feeling like an outcast.”

The experience of not belonging resonates with Anok Yai, a fellow Sudanese model, who in February 2018 became only the second Black model ever to open a Prada show (the first was Naomi Campbell, in 1997). “In the beginning, I felt really isolated,” she says. “I got thrown into the modeling industry very quickly and I kind of had to navigate it on my own. I also have social anxiety, so I struggled a lot with connecting with people. Backstage, there would maybe be one other Black girl, but now my tribe is backstage. I can speak my own language to my friends. They are basically like my family.”

For all the celebration of this moment, the elephant in the room remains. Why are we only just beginning to truly embrace African models on the international runways? Particularly when, as Omoyemi Akerele, the founder of Lagos Fashion Week, says, the issue cannot be put down to a lack of fresh talent: “Over the last decade, we have worked alongside agencies dedicated to discovering and nurturing new faces from across the continent. Models like Mayowa Nicholas started out walking at Lagos Fashion Week.”

The pandemic, as well as the logistics of the African continent, have, Vogue contributing casting director Ashley Brokaw explains, played a significant role in the lack of African models on the international runways. “The reason everyone saw a lot of new faces this season was really a function of access,” she says. “Prior to the pandemic, we had sorted through initial visa issues – some countries were definitely easier than others – we got all the paperwork, we got all the necessary travel documents for the girls done in advance, and then everything shut down. So, the explosion of African girls on the catwalk that we suddenly see is a result of things opening up.”

The previous scarcity of African models, continues Brokaw, can also be attributed to outmoded casting processes. “Over the years, I have had to do my scouting through an agent, perhaps based in Milan or Paris, who would filter their choices down to me. Now, thanks to social media, I can reach out directly to scouts in say Rwanda or Burundi, or Uganda and find a great girl. They can also text, WhatsApp, or find me through Instagram. The level of access through social media is just incredible. This means I’m now able to choose girls through my own lens, which makes the process so much more democratic and inclusive.”

The power of social media has also been a game-changer for Piergiorgio Del Moro, the founder of DM Casting, which he runs together with Samuel Ellis Scheinman. “Every day,” begins Del Moro, who discovered Akech, “I receive tons of messages and images from scouts and potential models from all over the world.”

The previous system, which, Scheinman explains, “came down to where money was invested to find models”, meant that the Black girls cast were predominantly light-skinned African Americans, and only one or two were African because the agencies didn’t have the right connections to get girls from Africa into Europe. “And so, for us, we see social media as a real change in terms of how scouting has blossomed in Africa. We are now able to have a photo of a girl sent to us in a nanosecond.”

Logistics, economics, and technology aside, there is no denying how much the global reckoning around race, diversity, and inclusion, heightened in the wake of George Floyd’s murder, has forced a shift in mindset towards racial inequities and unconscious bias. The casting process, agrees Scheinman, is no exception. “The industry has definitely gone through a soul search about what diversity means, what inclusivity means, and what being truly global means when it comes to casting. We really saw this starting to shift about five years ago, and so for us as casting directors, the more options we have, the more we’re going to want to explore every version of beauty. Now that we have access to these amazing girls, there’s no reason not to work with them.”

As the casting director for Kerby Jean-Raymond’s label Pyer Moss, which actively celebrates Blackness and casts accordingly, Katherine Mateo has long been vocal about the narrow ideals of beauty perpetuated by the fashion industry. And she’s not afraid to highlight the complicity of the casting process. “For many years, we have been stuck on what society has trained us to believe is the ‘perfect’ skin color, size, age, height. But the fact of the matter is people want to see the world that reflects their reality. Our world does not have one type of beauty, and we as casting directors have the power to directly connect with brands and publications and hold them accountable for the change we would like to see.”

Del Moro adds, “It is our job to push diversity. Diversity of age, diversity of size, diversity of skin color. Some editors, like Edward [Enninful], have over the years raised their voices about diversity, and you also have some designers who have it at the forefront of their minds. But where they don’t, it’s our job to push for it.”

Valentino’s Pierpaolo Piccioli is known to champion African models such as Akech; his groundbreaking spring/summer ’19 haute couture show famously featured an all-Black cast. “For months, I had been nourishing the desire, the fantasy, to make couture inclusive. Simple as it may seem, it started with an iconic picture by Cecil Beaton of the Charles James salon. I said to myself, ‘What if instead of these white-swan models we had a salon filled with Black women wearing couture?’” His research took him to archive editions of Jet and Ebony.

What he discovered strengthened his resolve. “Magazines aimed at a Black readership had to buy most of the clothes for their editorials because couture houses didn’t want to lend to them. The more I delved into it, the more I felt I had to do something. Not to say or to promise, but to do. Fashion is the language I use to express my values and ideas, and I thought the only trustworthy, valuable statement that I could make was through a couture show with only Black models. Do I think it’s enough? No, it’s not. But every time I look at that finale picture, I know it meant something, and I know I want to do more.”

While he is under no illusion about the mammoth hurdle to eradicate racial inequity in fashion, Piccioli is excited about the current trajectory of African models. “I am pretty sure there is no coming back from this. It is unlikely to be replaced by constraints and unreachable standards of beauty. These must be defeated because being standardized does not belong in the future we wish to witness.”

The characteristically straight-talking Bethann Hardison, a trailblazing veteran Black model, agent, and long-time activist for diversity in the industry, has reservations. She suggests caution over what could potentially be a double-edged sword. To be clear, she asserts that this isn’t to rain on anyone’s parade; her perspective comes from experience:

“Remember, I’ve been around for a while, so I see these things through a different gaze,” she explains. “Of course, I believe in racial diversity, but the good news and the bad news is that fashion changes. I worry that this situation becomes this thing where, ‘If you’re Black you’re in,’ which means then at some point, you could be out.” Again, to avoid misinterpretation, Hardison adds a caveat. “Look, I’m not saying that this will absolutely be the case in this situation, but generally when you lean so hard in one direction, the natural move after a while is to begin to lean far into the opposite end.”

There is validity to her point. There is a constant tug of war within the thorny triad of diversity, authenticity, and longevity. Is it real? Will it last? For how long? Scheinman admits that there is an element of casting that is performative. “We have some clients for whom diversity is embedded in their DNA, and there are others where we have had to have very active discussions with them, where they then say, ‘I really want to change, I want to be more inclusive.’

While the industry perhaps hasn’t necessarily invested much in the way of size inclusivity, I feel like the racial aspect of diversity is the one that is most embedded. It’s like a non-negotiable. For Piergiorgio and me, there’s no question that the world could go back to, say, a ‘Russian casting’. It’s just not modern. Not only is diversity an obligation, but it would also be irresponsible to treat it as something so disposable.”

This is music to the ears of Akerele, who stresses that while ensuring representation from marginalized communities to reflect our “global village”, stakeholders must be mindful to ensure no one is left out of the conversation. “Casting directors across the world must hold themselves accountable to a higher standard. The underlying question should be, ‘Who am I excluding?’” This responsibility, however, argues Abrima Erwiah of the Ghana-based brand and social enterprise Studio One Eighty-Nine, extends far beyond casting directors.

The onus, she believes, is on everyone, from consumers to brands to editors and anyone who engages with the industry. “Yes,” she admits, echoing some of Hardison’s misgivings, “some people might see it as a trend and a moment and try and suck it dry to move on to the next sexy thing, but whether we believe we have power or not, we all have to come together and work on this as a community. If the logistics and the infrastructure are there to support these models, I think it will work.”

It is a sentiment, a clarion call if you will echoed by Enninful. He believes the way to ensure that this “moment” isn’t transient, is to ensure the models’ careers go the distance. “It’s sad and heartbreaking for me to see girls who are on the rise suddenly taper off. We need to ensure these girls last.

 

We have to invest in them, nurture them, and support them with editorial, with advertising, with shows. It has to be 360.” Recalling Alek Wek’s early modeling career, he reveals the secret to her longevity: “Alek Wek didn’t suddenly become Alek Wek. There was a group of us behind girls like her, propelling them forward. This is what we have to do in all our different roles. Getting these girls and then throwing them away after one season? That has to stop.”

Outside, the grey skies have dimmed to a blue-black. The energy among the models is still high. The infectious sound of Afro B’s “Drogba (Joanna)” reverberates around the studio, and the frisson of excitement that permeated the air earlier in the day shows no sign of abating.

As the hairstylist prepares her for another shot, Akech mulls over the hope that the uprising of African models goes beyond a trend. “I mean,” she says, choosing her words carefully, “that is the goal, that it becomes more than a moment.” And then, almost immediately, as if to correct herself, she answers more resolutely: “Actually, I don’t see it being a trend. Also,” she says, laughing, “there are so many of us – we are just not going to go out of style.”

Iman, the groundbreaking original African model, who not only paved the way but has long campaigned for diversity on the catwalk, has a message for Akech et al. “If beauty is in the eye of the beholder, then let the beholder be you.” And her charge to the world? “All hail our African models with their jet-black skin, impossibly long limbs and natural hair, full of joy and absolutely no compromise.”

Content courtesy of British Vogue Magazine & NFH Digital Team

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