Thursday 30th of April 2026

Nairobi, Kenya

Full List of Vmas Winners: Winners for 2023 Mtv Video Music Awards

At the 2023 MTV Video Music Awards, Taylor Swift broke all previous records by taking home a record-tying nine Moon Persons. She now shares the record for the most victories in a single episode with Michael Jackson and moves up to second place among all artists in the show’s history, just behind Madonna.
Swift received awards for Video of the Year, Song of the Year, Artist of the Year, Best Pop, Best Cinematography, Best Direction, Best Visual Effects, Best Editing, and Best Direction. Since the video and song are what she is concentrating on for big accolades, her single “Anti-Hero” won in the majority of categories.
She won nine out of the 11 awards for which she and her work were nominated at the 2023 MTV VMAs.

Taylor Swift’s nine wins at the 2023 MTV VMAs brought her lifetime total to 23, second only to Beyoncé’s 30.
Other major winners at the annual ceremony that celebrates all things connected to music videos included Ice Spice as Best New Artist, K-pop stars like Stray Kids and Tomorrow X Together taking home prizes, and host Nicki Minaj earning another honor for Best Hip-Hop.

Here are all the winners of the 2023 MTV VMAs:

VIDEO OF THE YEAR

  • Doja Cat – “Attention”
  • Miley Cyrus – “Flowers”
  • Nicki Minaj – “Super Freaky Girl”
  • Olivia Rodrigo – “vampire”
  • Sam Smith, Kim Petras – “Unholy”
  • SZA – “Kill Bill”
  • Taylor Swift – “Anti-Hero”  WINNER

ARTIST OF THE YEAR

  • Beyoncé
  • Doja Cat
  • Karol G
  • Nicki Minaj
  • Shakira
  • Taylor Swift

SONG OF THE YEAR

  • Miley Cyrus – “Flowers”
  • Olivia Rodrigo – “vampire”
  • Rema & Selena Gomez – “Calm Down”
  • Sam Smith, Kim Petras – “Unholy”
  • Steve Lacy – “Bad Habit”
  • SZA – “Kill Bill”
  • Taylor Swift – “Anti-Hero” WINNER

BEST NEW ARTIST

  • GloRilla
  • Ice Spice WINNER
  • Kaliii
  • Peso Pluma
  • PinkPantheress
  • Reneé Rapp

PUSH PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR

  • August 2022: Saucy Santana – “Booty”
  • September 2022: Stephen Sanchez – “Until I Found You”
  • October 2022: JVKE – “golden hour”
  • November 2022: Flo Milli – “Conceited”
  • December 2022: Reneé Rapp – “Colorado”
  • January 2023: Sam Ryder – “All The Way Over”
  • February 2023: Armani White – “GOATED”
  • March 2023: Fletcher – “Becky’s So Hot”
  • April 2023: Tomorrow X Together – “Sugar Rush Ride”  WINNER
  • May 2023: Ice Spice – “Princess Diana”
  • June 2023: FLO – “Losing You”
  • July 2023: Lauren Spencer Smith – “That Part”

BEST COLLABORATION

  • David Guetta & Bebe Rexha – “I’m Good (Blue)”
  • Post Malone, Doja Cat – “I Like You (A Happier Song)”
  • Diddy ft. Bryson Tiller, Ashanti, Yung Miami – “Gotta Move On”
  • Karol G, Shakira – “TQG” WINNER
  • Metro Boomin with The Weeknd, 21 Savage, and Diddy – “Creepin’ (Remix)”
  • Rema & Selena Gomez – “Calm Down”

BEST POP

  • Demi Lovato – “Swine”
  • Dua Lipa – “Dance The Night (From Barbie The Album)”
  • Ed Sheeran – “Eyes Closed”
  • Miley Cyrus – “Flowers”
  • Olivia Rodrigo – “vampire”
  • P!NK – “Trustfall”
  • Taylor Swift – “Anti-Hero” WINNER

BEST HIP-HOP

  • Diddy ft. Bryson Tiller, Ashanti, Yung Miami – “Gotta Move On”
  • DJ Khaled ft. Drake & Lil Baby – “Staying Alive”
  • GloRilla & Cardi B – “Tomorrow 2”
  • Lil Uzi Vert – “Just Wanna Rock”
  • Lil Wayne ft. Swizz Beatz & DMX – “Kant Nobody”
  • Metro Boomin ft Future – “Superhero (Heroes and Villains)”
  • Nicki Minaj – “Super Freaky Girl”  WINNER

BEST R&B

  • Alicia Keys ft. Lucky Daye – “Stay”
  • Chlöe ft. Chris Brown – “How Does It Feel”
  • Metro Boomin with The Weeknd, 21 Savage, and Diddy – “Creepin’ (Remix)”
  • SZA – “Shirt” WINNER
  • Toosii – “Favorite Song”
  • Yung Bleu & Nicki Minaj

BEST ROCK

  • Foo Fighters – “The Teacher”
  • Linkin Park – “Lost (Original Version)”
  • Red Hot Chili Peppers – “Tippa My Tongue”
  • Måneskin – “The Loneliest” WINNER
  • Metallica – “Lux Æterna”
  • Muse – “You Make Me Feel Like It’s Halloween”

BEST LATIN

  • Anitta – “Funk Rave”  WINNER
  • Bad Bunny – “Where she goes”
  • Eslabon Armado, Peso Pluma – “Ella Baila Sola” –
  • Bad Bunny – “un x100to”
  • Karol G, Shakira – “TQG”
  • Rosalía – “Despechá”
  • Shakira – “Acróstico”

BEST AFROBEATS

  • Ayra Starr – “Rush”
  • Burna Boy – “It’s Plenty”
  • Davido ft. Musa Keys – “Unavailable”
  • Fireboy DML & Asake – “Bandana”
  • Libianca – “People”
  • Rema & Selena Gomez – “Calm Down”  WINNER
  • Wizkid ft. Ayra Starr– “2 Sugar”

BEST K-POP

  • aespa – “Girls”
  • BLACKPINK – “Pink Venom”
  • FIFTY FIFTY – “Cupid”
  • SEVENTEEN – “Super”
  • Stray Kids – “S-Class”  WINNER
  • TOMORROW X TOGETHER – “Sugar Rush Ride”

Video for Good

  • Alicia Keys — If I Ain’t Got You (Orchestral)
  • Bad Bunny — “El Apagón — Aquí Vive Gente”
  • Demi Lovato — “Swine”
  • WINNER: Dove Cameron — “Breakfast”
  • Imagine Dragons — “Crushed”
  • Maluma — “La Reina”

Best Direction

  • Doja Cat — “Attention” — Directed by Tanu Muiño
  • Drake — “Falling Back” — Directed by Director X (Julien Christian Lutz)
  • Kendrick Lamar — “Count Me Out” — Directed by Dave Free & Kendrick Lamar
  • Megan Thee Stallion — “Her” — Directed by Colin Tilley
  • Sam Smith, Kim Petras — “Unholy” — Directed by Floria Sigismondi
  • SZA — “Kill Bill” — Directed by Christian Breslauer
  • WINNER: Taylor Swift — “Anti-Hero” — Directed by Taylor Swift

Best Cinematography

  • Adele — “I Drink Wine” — Cinematography by Adam Newport-Berra
  • Ed Sheeran — “Eyes Closed” — Cinematography by Natasha Baier
  • Janelle Monae — “Lipstick Lover” — Cinematography by Allison Anderson
  • Kendrick Lamar — “Count Me Out” — Cinematography by Adam Newport-Berra
  • Miley Cyrus — “Flowers” — Cinematography by Marcell Rev
  • Olivia Rodrigo — “vampire” — Cinematography by Russ Fraser
  • WINNER: Taylor Swift — “Anti-Hero” — Cinematography by Rina Yang

Best visual effects

  • Fall Out Boy — “Love From The Other Side” — Visual effects by Thomas Bailey and Josh Shaffner
  • Harry Styles — “Music For A Sushi Restaurant” — Visual effects by Chelsea Delfino and Black Kite Studios
  • Melanie Martinez — “VOID” — Visual effects by Carbon
  • Nicki Minaj — “Super Freaky Girl” — Visual effects by Max Colt and Sergio Mashevskyi
  • Sam Smith, Kim Petras — “Unholy” — Visual effects by Max Colt / FRENDER
  • WINNER: Taylor Swift — “Anti-Hero” — Visual effects by Parliament

Best choreography

  • WINNER: BLACKPINK — “Pink Venom” — Choreography by Kiel Tutin, Sienna Lalau, Lee Jung (YGX), Taryn Cheng (YGX)
  • Dua Lipa — “Dance The Night (From Barbie The Album)” — Choreography by Charm LaDonna
  • Jonas Brothers — “Waffle House” — Choreography by Jerry Reece
  • Megan Thee Stallion — “Her” — Choreography by Sean Bankhead
  • Panic! At The Disco — “Middle Of A Breakup” — Choreography by Monika Felice Smith
  • Sam Smith, Kim Petras — “Unholy” — Choreography by (LA)HORDE — Marine Brutti, Jonathan Debrouwer, Arthur Harel

Best art direction

  • boygenius — “the film” — Art direction by Jen Dunlap
  • BLACKPINK — “Pink Venom” — Art direction by Seo Hyun Seung (GIGANT)
  • WINNER: Doja Cat — “Attention” — Art direction by Spencer Graves
  • Lana Del Rey ft. Jon Batiste — “Candy Necklace” — Art direction by Brandon Mendez
  • Megan Thee Stallion — “Her” — Art direction by Niko Philipides
  • SZA — “Shirt” — Art direction by Kate Bunch

Best Editing

  • BLACKPINK — “Pink Venom” — Edited by Seo Hyun Seung (GIGANT)
  • Kendrick Lamar — “Rich Spirit” — Edited by Grason Caldwell
  • Miley Cyrus — “River” — Edited by Brandan Walter
  • WINNER: Olivia Rodrigo — “vampire” — Edited by Sofia Kerpan and David Checel
  • SZA — “Kill Bill” — Edited by Luis Caraza Peimbert
  • Taylor Swift — “Anti-Hero” — Edited by Chancler Haynes

Content courtesy of Today, CNN & NFH

African Fashion: Ghana Must Go Bags Are Used by a Nigerian Fashion Designer to Produce Memorable Garments.

One thing is certain: this bag is well-liked among Africans. Some refer to it as a “Ghana Must Go” bag, while others refer to it as a “Mashangaan bag,” and others who disagree with the first two refer to it as a “Khonz’ekhaya. In Kenya, the bag is commonly known as Osuofia Bag ”

Strong plastic bags, or ukhonz’ekhanya as they are known in Zulu, are frequently used by Africans who travel great distances. When returning to their homelands after spending time in the city, where they work to support their families, they frequently use this bag to transport heavy luggage.

The exhibition “Anyi N’aga – We Are Going” was curated by Nigerian multidisciplinary artist Chioma Obiegbu in partnership with bnnà bomà. She provides more information about the bag that is popular on our continent.

“In West Africa, the blue and white or occasionally red, black, and white checkered bags known as Ghana Must Go earned not only appeal but also a connection to migration during the 1980s in Nigeria when millions of undocumented Ghanaians were evicted from that country.

The bags got their moniker because many of them used them to bundle and send their possessions back to Ghana, according to Obiegbu.

Obiegbu uses fashion to convey the stories of West African immigration while collaborating with a large group of brilliant African creatives.

“The movement of individuals across nearby boundaries and distant continents has recently been a reoccurring issue, especially with the advent of globalization.

“Many people migrate in search of better economic opportunities, employment, educational opportunities, and marriage opportunities—bringing their possessions, cultures, and beliefs with them,” she said.

“Anyi N’aga – We Are Going explores migration and heritage as they relate to the aforementioned points through the lens of fashion, while artistically drawing on the symbolism of the Ghana Must Go bags as they have been associated with travel and migration.”

South African designer Wanda Lephoto uses the bags’ prints in some of his works, while Obiegbu uses the actual bags to create fashion items.

He incorporated the Ghana Must Go prints, for instance, in his “PEOPLE” Spring/Summer ’24 collection. He incorporated the Ghana Must Go prints in a line he named “Me Fie” for this collection.

In the Ghanaian language of Akan, “Me Fie” means “My Place of Origin. The late Virgil Abloh’s 3% design philosophy, which held that you might create something new by altering a procedure, a product, or a perspective by 3%, was the inspiration for the collection, according to Lephoto.

Content courtesy of  IOL & NFH

ESSENCE Fashion House: The Ecosystem Of African Fashion

African designers and industry professionals discuss the influence of Africa on fashion globally.

Journalist Nana Agyemang, who is also the CEO of EveryStylishGirl, put together a diverse panel of African designers, industry professionals, and business owners for an ESSENCE Fashion House conversation.
Amira Rasool, the CEO of the wholesale marketplace The Folklore, Barkue Tubman, the Chief of Staff and Diasporic Engagement at Essence Ventures, and Kwaku Bediako, the creator and creative director of the fashion label Chocolate, were all part of the Ecosystem of African Fashion.

They each emphasized the interconnectivity of Africa with the international fashion business during their conversation.

“I feel like it’s so important that we connect,” Tubman said. “That’s part of my responsibility at ESSENCE Ventures, and just really in my life. I think that’s why this all works for me.” “For everything, with each other.
I believe we are aware of our effect on the fashion industry, and connecting the disconnected is what Essence Ventures wants to continue doing.
We’re going to accomplish it via a number of pillars, including economic inclusion, fashion, entertainment, and diaspora. Because I believe that Africa is luxurious, I am a major fan of African luxury.

Bediako emphasized how important it is to link African traditions with those of other continents as well as with those of other civilizations within Africa.
During the discussion, Caroline Wanga, the moderator of We’ve Been Here Before 50 Years of Hip-Hop Fashion, was actually sporting a bespoke Chocolate.
Bright colors and a variety of textures were used throughout the composition.
Rasool is commemorating The Folklore’s fifth anniversary, while Bediako is also marking Chocolate’s tenth anniversary.

Rasool is essential in helping different products gain exposure by securing placements with stores like Nordstrom, Saks, and Bloomingdale’s.

No insult intended, but working with the brands is the most challenging aspect of running our firm, Rasool added. “Because you are creative, your business is sensitive. It’s also the most satisfying aspect, and my journey to South Africa is what actually gave me the idea to found The Folklore.
While I was an undergrad, I had never been there before, and I instantly fell in love with the community.
I’ve worked in the fashion business for some time. I used to work in the media and was familiar with all of the European and American brands, but I was completely ignorant of the South African names at the time.

Content Courtesy of ESSENCE Fashion House & NFH

Messe Frankfurt South Africa: Allfashion Sourcing Cape Town Premium African Fashion & Textiles Event

Brought to you by Messe Frankfurt South Africa, this renowned event:
• Will be hosted at the CTICC from 26 – 28 September 2023
• Offers trend talks, special product & exhibitor fashion showcases and industry focused seminars & sustainability-focused workshops
• Will be attended by the general public and:
o Manufacturers, distributors & wholesalers
o Merchandisers, retailers & boutique owners
o Private labels, designers & agents
o Department stores, chain stores & supermarkets
• Hosts the acclaimed 2023 young designers’ competition

Registrations are now open and entry is free once registration has been confirmed.
• Time: 9 am to 4 pm
• Venue: CTICC 2, Corner of Heerengracht & Rua Bartholomeu Dias, Foreshore
• Cost: Free
• Ticket bookings & registration: 2023 AFS Event

source all fashion Bringing together African innovation, design, and manufacturing for the textile and fashion industries, Cape Town is a business-oriented marketplace with global sourcing choices.
The third largest fair-trade enterprise in the world, this German behemoth is owned by Messe Frankfurt, the world’s leading organizer of textile fairs. It operates in over 50 countries.

Allfashion Sourcing Cape Town promises to be the fashion and textile show of the year with more than 100 local and foreign exhibitors and two completely full halls at the Cape Town International Convention Centre.
Once more, Cape Town will draw tens of thousands of buyers, distributors, retailers, influencers, and designers because of the city’s cutting-edge inventiveness, global fashion trends, and environmentally friendly design and materials.

The upcoming 2023 Premium African Fashion & Textiles Event will support sustainable fashion in Africa and will be proudly hosted in South Africa, which not only serves as the continent’s fashion and textile hub and the official trade and distribution hub for the SADC nations but also ranks third in terms of employment in the sector.

Leading trend talks for Fall/Winter 2024–2025, inspired by the idea of “Space Age Eclecticism,” are presented to you by allfashion sources in collaboration with industry specialists Arsutoria.
These lectures will discuss the future of sustainable fashion as developed at the nth power and are inspired by Apple’s recently released immersive, virtual, and augmented reality visors, the VisonPro. Visitors to the event are invited to the trend forum area for a sensory experience of these trends.

Arsutoria The Workshop School, with its headquarters in Milan, is a preeminent international organization for technical and design education in shoes and bags.
Notably, it creates its own fashion movements centered on leather, shoes, and bags.
The Arsutoria seminar will therefore primarily focus on current trends in both menswear and womenswear.

Exhibitors at the event stand to reap the following major benefits:
• Reach targeted buyers and extend their brand presence to a vast network of visitors
• Present at one or more of the well-attended seminars
• Explore business opportunities in Africa and internationally
• Discover the latest industry trends and forecasts.
• Launch new products or services

General visitors will be enriched by:
• A curation of cutting-edge fashion shows and trend-centric seminars focusing on industry insights
• The latest advancements in sustainability and ethical fashion
• Interaction with a diverse range of fashion and accessories
• You can also look forward to a diversity of product categories at this year’s event including:
• Menswear
• Womenswear
• Leather
• Denim
• Luggage & Bags
• Footwear
• Sports & Leisure
• Tech & Processes
• Textile Wholesalers

All visitors are welcome to attend the event’s crown jewel, the sixth annual allfashion sourcing Young Designer Competition 2023, a distinguished platform for emerging local talent within the design industry to showcase their innovative design ideas.
All those attending get to experience Africa’s best textiles, fashion, and accessories, inspiring all those involved in production, retail, and merchandising. This is sustainable and ethical fashion sourcing, exhibiting, and eventing next level.

Registration for the event is now open: 2023 AFS Event

Content courtesy of CBN & NFH

Africa Fashion Week London: Meet the Designers

Africa Fashion Week London is still one of the most reliable fashion weeks in the world after 13 years! Following a stellar performance at Africa Fashion Week Brasil, AFWL is back to add a little samba spice to the proceedings.
Due to significant building renovations, this year’s event will relocate from its traditional home at Freemasons’ Hall to a venue in Central London.

Additionally, the show is somewhat altering our format. On Day 1 (Friday, October 27), they will serve as the venue for the UK Africa Trade Expo. People will be able to attend eminent panel discussions and workshops, shop at the exhibitor stands, and attend.

On Day 2 (Saturday, October 28), exhibitor browsing resumes before our renowned (and fantastic!) catwalk showcases of the best in African creativity and design continue.

Day 3 (Sunday, October 29) concludes with the Black History & Lifestyle Awards x AFWL VIP Gala event after additional shopping is done.
While AFWL2023, final preparations are being done, a more comprehensive itinerary will be issued.
However, the following designers and exhibitors will be on exhibition this year, along with some of the innovations that will be on display:

1. OJ Clothings
OJ Clothings, a menswear company based in Lagos’ Lekki neighborhood, adds something to a man’s silhouette.
OJ Samuel, the developer of the company, believes his designs are artistic, unique, original, and inventive since they push the boundaries of conventional and modern.

2. ÌK-PEN
K-PEN is a high-end women’s fashion label with headquarters in Abuja, Nigeria. Ikpen Yvonne Akwitti created the company in 2006 with the aim of achieving perfection and workmanship.
The firm specializes in contemporary African-inspired design and offers bespoke and prêt-à-porter services. It uses ethnic accents and interesting silhouettes to create traditional bridal gowns, everyday staples, resort wear, and dazzling dresses.

3. Elpis Megalio
The pinnacle of bespoke and ready-to-wear fashion, Elpis Megalio is designed for the contemporary woman seeking uniqueness and expression.
Olufunke Afolabi, the creative director, is inspired by the confluence of art and wanderlust and courageously explores the brilliant world of colors, pushing design boundaries with unmatched craftsmanship.
Elpis Megalio is a proponent of giving women the tools they need to embrace their individuality and exude confidence. Their carefully chosen items are made with the intention of making every woman feel truly beautiful when dressed in clothes made just for her.

4. Piilz and Poizn
Piillz & Poizn, known for their avant-garde women’s clothing that features distinctive, high-fashion pieces intended to make a dramatic statement, are back on the AFWL runway. Piillz & Poizn has swiftly established a reputation as one of the most daring and cutting-edge fashion brands available thanks to its reckless approach to fashion.
Ifeoma Kate Umenyiora established the brand in 2018 to showcase her love of pushing the limits of fashion.
Piillz and Poizn is known for its immaculate attention to detail, opulent fabrics, and cutting-edge, avant-garde designs. Piilz and Poizn’s aesthetic is based on the notion that clothing should be lively, adventurous, and entertaining.

A focus on shape and structure is one of the defining characteristics of Piillz and Poizn’s design ethos.
The clothing line Piilz n Poizn is designed with delicate draping, thoughtful cut-outs, and sculptural designs that highlight the body’s inherent curves.
Piillz and Poizn’s clothing line has a distinct, high-end vibe that is unequaled by other fashion labels because of this attention to detail.

About Africa Fashion Week London (AFWL)

Africa Fashion Week London (AFWL), which was established in 2011 by Queen Ronke Ademiluyi-Ogunwusi, is the biggest fashion event in Europe for showcasing and supporting African and African-inspired design talent.

With a collaborative catwalk, exhibition, and business development program, AFWL has been in the forefront of raising awareness of Africa’s developing fashion industry on the global market and showcasing the continent’s up-and-coming designers and apparel sector.
Since 2011, AFWL has created at least 10 events, including the Mayor of London’s Black History Month festivities, and staged 10 catwalk shows while also providing expertise to at least 10 more events.

A highlight on the yearly fashion calendar, we have also shown over 800 young designers and exhibitors from Africa, Europe, and America to close to 70,000 visitors, including buyers, retailers, key industry figures, and the media.
Designers benefit from AFWL’s contacts, expertise, and understanding within the fashion industry.

AFWL is dedicated to building a platform for African and African-inspired designers that not only presents them to an international market but also supports them in creating a sustainable business that is globally recognized and fosters social change in Africa. The core team of AFWL is made up of experienced fashion industry experts and business professionals.

Content courtesy of Business Day & NFH

A New Podcast on African Fashion Has Been Launched by King’s College London

Africa Fashion Futures is a brand-new podcast that discusses knowledge and expertise on African fashion, the creations of African designers, and chances and developments in the sector.
The series, which is hosted by Dr. Lauren England, Professor Roberta Comunian, and Dr. Eka Ikpe (African Leadership Centre), examines fashion as both a sector of the global economy and a lens through which to examine cultural expression, memory politics, the creation of traditions, as well as the broader economic and social impact of the creative economy.

We’re excited to introduce this new podcast to the world and highlight African design. It’s a fantastic approach to demonstrate the overlaps and differences between creative and cultural values, as well as the possibilities for the growth of the creative economy in Africa.

Dr. Eka Ikpe, African Leadership Center Director and co-host of the podcast
Intellectual property rights in the design industry are the main topic of the first episode. The emergence of small businesses and (isi) Shweshwe in South Africa are discussed by Professor Jen Snowball (Rhodes University), who also touches on the true effects of property rights on the lives of microenterprises.

Professor Snowball was a guest at King’s University at the time of the podcast’s recording as part of the Global Visiting Fellows program, a project that aims to expand opportunities for cooperation, promote reciprocal learning, advance equality, diversity, and inclusion, support excellent research that has an impact, share educational innovation, and advance the sharing of best practices.

Ken Kweku Nimo, a brand strategist and the author of “Africa in Fashion,” joins the second episode to discuss his research into African luxury fashion firms and the concept of luxury. Additionally, Ken’s work and the notion of Lead Firms from Below in African Fashion are connected in some ways by the conversation.

In episode three, Queen Ronke Ademiluyi-Ogunwusi, the creator of Africa Fashion Week London, discusses the festival’s development as well as her views on leadership, women’s empowerment, and sustainable fashion.

The African Leadership Centre and the Department of Culture, Media & Creative Industries collaborated on the podcast, which is edited by Cristina Cabral, with funding from the King’s Global Engagement Partnership Fund.

It is a component of the King’s Together Project – African Fashion Futures, which examines fashion in general and the work of fashion designers in particular.
Employing Kenya and Nigeria as case studies provides the chance to set up a study framework, methodology, and network of academic and outside collaborators to provide a thorough grasp of the intricate and dynamic nature of the African fashion ecology.

Content courtesy of India Education Diary & NFH

To Honor African Fashion and Culture, the Southern African Times Has Opened an Official Merchandise Shop.

In Honor Of African Fashion And Culture, The Southern African Times Opens Official Merch Store
The Southern African Times, a prestigious media company famous for its thorough reporting of news and events, is excited to announce the opening of its official merch store, a representation of African fashion and culture that goes beyond the bounds of conventional journalism.
The recently updated sat store is expected to enthrall audiences everywhere by reflecting the pulse of Africa and building a close relationship with its followers.

The Southern African Times’ executive director of commerce, Edgar Dzimiri, reveals that the store’s resurgence is motivated by factors other than financial success.

Instead, it aims to close the communication gap between media and viewers by creating an immersive environment that reflects the very best of African identity and innovation. “This endeavor extends beyond commerce and product development,” claims Dzimiri.
“Our main goal is to establish a deep connection with our audience.”

The Southern African Times has delved into the world of apparel and merchandise, handpicking a collection that has been meticulously selected. This is a break from the traditional path of media brand expansions.
We’re not working with organizations that are only interested in logo placement, Dzimiri emphasizes.
We are collaborating with committed designers whose carefully produced brands reflect our dedication to authenticity.

African fashion has dominated the global stage in the 21st century, from runways to music videos and movies. Notably, celebrities like Beyoncé and Michelle Obama have appeared on red carpets dressed in African garb, setting trends and igniting interest around the world.
This effect is further amplified by the prevalence of Afrobeat and African dancers on television.. While the world pays attention, young Africans everywhere are showing a rebirth of interest in their history, including a revived passion for traditional clothing and cultural practices.

An example in the field of African fashion, u.mi-1, connects with this story.
They produce contemporary jackets and pants known lovingly as “African denim” by maintaining and reworking the traditional handcrafted Nigerian cloth known as aso-oke.

The designs put a modern spin on tradition while showcasing the depth and variety of Nigerian culture in each piece.

The Southern African Times works with companies like u.mi-1 to promote African design and culture. The media behemoth adds to the ongoing discussion over the value of cultural heritage and artistic expression by opening an official retail store.
By transcending conventional storytelling and enabling readers to embody the precise essence they read about, the convergence of journalism and fashion in the Satstore offers a potent synergy.

The Southern African Times is steadfast in its dedication to engaging with its readers on a deeper level as the worldwide spotlight on African culture becomes brighter by the day.
The official merch store, which invites people to engage with the pulse of Africa and appreciate the richness of African design and culture, is a monument to this commitment.

As the world pays attention, young Africans all around the world have rekindled their interest in their history, including their love of traditional clothing and cultural practices.

Content Courtesy of MENAFN & NFH

A Recent Brooklyn Museum Exhibit Examines the Continent’s Thriving Fashion and Art Scenes During the Time of Liberation.

Co-curator Ernestine White-Mifetu gives us an illuminating tour of “Africa Fashion” and the greater narrative it encapsulates.
At the Brooklyn Museum, an electrifying new exhibition establishes Africa as a true fashion capital, bursting with imagination, ingenuity, and its own aesthetic heritage. “African Fashion” showcases the designers and other creatives leading the continent’s charge into the 21st century.

Yet the exhibition, which runs through October 22, is much more than a wondrous fantasia of eye-popping looks on mannequins. By highlighting key pieces from designers, artists, and artisans from the mid-20th century onward, it illuminates a panoply of artistic visions to come out of Africa and its diaspora, laying the fascinating historical groundwork for today’s stylistic revolution.

The Brooklyn Museum is the perfect place for curators Ernestine White-Mifetu and Annissa Malvoisin to compile over 300 objects, including not only clothing and textiles but also jewelry, art, photography, and video, as well as vintage posters, magazine covers, and other ephemera.

It has been a century since the Brooklyn Museum became the first art institution to present African art to a North American audience.
The Brooklyn Public Library and the museum have collaborated to offer loanable copies of the historical books on display in the exhibition. According to the museum, it is the biggest installation of its kind ever made in a place in North America.

The Victoria and Albert Museum in London hosted the debut of “Africa Fashion” in 2022, but it has since profited significantly from its voyage to Brooklyn.
During the tour, co-curator Ernestine White-Mifetu said, “It was important that we insert the narratives of creatives here in North America.”
As the museum’s curator of African art, she and her colleagues modified the performance for a new audience, incorporating it into its new setting and complementing it with pieces from the museum’s own collection, one of the largest in the country.
A unique fusion of African and diasporic identity with American flair is the eventual product.

The exhibition has, for instance, pieces by Aurora James and Christopher John Rogers, two designers from Brooklyn who are garnering significant attention. James was featured on the cover of Vogue in 2020 with a painted portrait by Jordan Casteel due to her African-inspired designs and her 15 Percent Pledge program, which calls on fashion shops to allocate at least 15 percent of their shelf space to Black-owned businesses.
The year after he unveiled his collection in 2018, Rogers, 24, won the top honor at the CFDA/Vogue Fashion Fund.

The beginning of the play coincides with the end of colonial control in Africa.
In 1956, Morocco and Tunisia declared their independence from French rule. A year later, Ghana took control of itself from Britain. 1960, known as the Year of Africa, brought the independence of 17 additional African countries.
At the conclusion of the decade, that number had increased to 48.
These singular and significant independence movements sparked profound self-reinvention and awakenings that ushered in a cultural renaissance that reverberated across the arts. It’s significant that artists take inspiration from once-disadvantaged traditions to develop entirely original and avant-garde forms.

It was a turbulent yet energetic period that, in many respects, would not have been possible without the FESTAC festival series.
The first one happened in Dakar, Senegal, in 1966, and the final one happened in Lagos, Nigeria, in 1977.
The month-long festivals, as depicted in “Africa Fashion,” welcomed performers, writers, and musicians from all over the continent and beyond.
The largest cultural festival ever held on African land, it brought together up to 15,000 participants from practically every African nation (54 at the time) and the diaspora to inspire pan-African unity via the arts. According to White-Mifetu, “You see Langston Hughes and Duke Ellington going to FESTAC in 1966, and Stevie Wonder and Alvin Ailey in 1977.

Another famous participant in 1977 was Mama Africa, a South African musician and anti-apartheid campaigner. The Black and Brown figure and its full range of creativity were widely celebrated.
The first group of clothes is found in this cheerful context. According to White-Mifetu, “As the continent freed itself, artists used fabric as a visual language to engage with the new and hopeful political landscape.”
She motioned toward a collection of commemorative garments, which were worn to mark significant political occasions.

The final one features a photograph of Nelson Mandela shortly after he was elected president of the African National Congress of South Africa in 1991 alongside a more modern print created by Nigerian designer Lola Faturoti, who is based in New York and worked to honor Barack Obama’s 2008 inauguration as president.
The next section discusses the several textile traditions prevalent on the continent, including the silk kente, raffia-woven kuba, indigo-dyed àdìrẹ, strip-woven a-kè, and mud-painted bògòlanfini, to name a few.

Both the geometric patterns painted on canvas by South African artist Esther Mahlangu and the color blocks used in Atta Kwami’s 2011 painting Another Time are inspired by the kente culture of Ghana.
“And of course,” added White-Mifetu, “we couldn’t include a contemporary Yinka Shoniba sculpture in this dialogue around the influence of textiles and their histories.”
A group of dressmakers and tailors who found themselves converted into contemporary 20th-century fashion designers developed from this crackling frisson.
Chris Seydou (Mali), Kofi Ansah (Ghana), Nama Bennis (Morocco), Alphadi (Mauritania), and Shade Thomas-Fahm (Nigeria) are five of them that are highlighted in this article.
As designers started to seek outside of their borders, a lot of the clothing on exhibit is intriguing hybridization of African and Western fashions.

The work of Thomas-Fahm, the first designer to create a store in Nigeria after visiting Britain and discovering the designer boutique, exemplifies this.
She created wrapped skirts with built-in zippers and head wraps with snaps in an effort to modernize her clients’ wardrobes.
According to White-Mifetu, “She was designed for the contemporary young woman who didn’t have time for all that draping, wrapping, and assembling.
” “Women were much more mobile and active in the post-independence world.”
A section of the display devoted to photography, which has become incredibly important to African life ever since the development of the camera, is among its more moving elements.

The portraiture of Malian photographers Seydou Keta and Malick Sidibé in the 1960s and 1970s seems to be expanded upon in two stylized fashion images by Senegalese artist Omar Victor Diop, which then lead through a corridor to the work of Brooklyn-based Kwame Braithwaite, a Guggenheim Fellow and key figure in the “Black is beautiful” movement.

There are also Hassan Hajjaj’s daring, colorfully framed images.
The “Kesh Angels” series by the Moroccan artist, which was published in 2010, featured covered and veiled ladies sitting on motionless motorbikes in front of Marrakesh’s Theatre Royal while also donning heart-shaped sunglasses and striped socks.

The exhibition’s conclusion, a last display of modern outfits created in the avant-garde attitude, most effectively drives home the idea that contemporary African fashion is a massive synthesis of various communities and influences.

The focal point is a unique burqa designed by Artsi Ifrach for Maison ArtC and fashioned of translucent crinoline in the shape of a trench coat, an idea from Europe.
It was further covered by the Moroccan designer with embroidered hands, which White-Mifetu described as “an Islamic representation of belief.”
Thebe Magugu, a well-known South African fashion designer who won the LVMH Young Fashion Designer Prize in 2019 for his investigations into African spirituality and ancestral ties, also has his Alchemy collection featured in this area.

“I hope that the exhibition challenges viewers’ perceptions of African fashion,” White-Mifetu stated. “Africa has long and richly contributed to the global conversation, whether through visual art, music, or fashion.”
“Africa Fashion” is on display at the Brooklyn Museum, 200 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY 11238 until October 22, 2023.

Content Courtesy of Art Net News & NFH

Africa’s Fashion Market Will Be Led by Nigeria and Egypt With $2.5 Billion in Sales.

Nigeria and Egypt are laying out their plans to rule the African fashion market, which includes footwear, clothing, and accessories.

By the end of 2023, these two countries are expected to generate a staggering $2.5 billion in revenue.

By 2023, Nairametrics’ analysis of Statista data projects that the Nigerian fashion market would grow to a $1.31 billion industry.

The projected market volume is expected to increase at a strong rate of 10.03% per year (CAGR 2023-2027), reaching an estimated peak of $1.92 billion by 2027.

By 2027, it is anticipated that Nigeria will have a booming user base of about 83.8 million users.
This is projected to increase from a user penetration rate of 24.4% in 2023 to an outstanding 34.1% by 2027.

The average revenue per user (ARPU) is projected to increase to $24.00.

The fashion industry in Egypt is also expected to reach $1.28 billion in 2023, continuing its upward trajectory. This industry is anticipated to reach a market volume of $2.35 billion by 2027, with a compound yearly growth rate (CAGR 2023-2027) increasing at an astounding 16.40%.
By 2027, Egypt is expected to have a user base of 56.4 million in the fashion business. Egypt’s user penetration, which was 33.3% in 2023, is expected to soar to an astonishing 47.1% by 2027.
The anticipated average revenue per user (ARPU) is $34.19.

How Are Nigeria and Egypt Going to Get This Done?
Analysts at Statista claim that the fashion industry has already seen a rise in the worldwide internet revenue share to 23% by 2020.

“The East and Southeast Asian regions are poised to continue driving the global growth trajectory, buoyed by their expanding middle-class population and a lagging offline shopping infrastructure,” according to the report.

Instagram Checkout is an example of an emerging trend that seamlessly incorporates shopping functionality into social media content to facilitate high-speed “inspire and sell” customer conversion.
The audience is gradually moving away from desktop platforms and toward mobile ones, highlighting the growing significance of improving the mobile browsing and checkout experience.

Nigeria is in a unique position with demand exceeding most African countries due to its massive population of over 200 million.
The success of e-commerce fashion is also being propelled by the expanding internet culture among Nigerians, which is being fueled by a remarkable 222.5 million telephone customers estimated in 2022, per the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS).

This shift is being driven by Lagos, which is frequently praised as the center of fashion and design.
With a population that exceeds 100 million and a youthful demographic that includes a sizable portion of people under 30, Egypt also has a sizable population.

This group drives demand in the fashion industry since they are fundamentally more fashion-conscious and eager to spend money on apparel and accessories.
Egypt’s reputation as a top travel destination, which attracts travelers from all over the world, supports the fashion industry further because tourists frequently go shopping and buy local clothing and gifts.

Egypt’s fashion business is boosted by the influx of foreign interest and trade, paving the way for rapid expansion.
As we continue to observe the African fashion landscapes, it appears that Egypt and Nigeria are primed to take the lead in this sector thanks to their sizable populations, thriving internet cultures, and fashion scenes.

Content courtesy of  Nairametric & NFH

Miss And Mrs India Kenya 2023 Crowned, Winners To Represent The Country In India 2024

The winners of Miss and Mrs. India Kenya 2023 will represent the nation in India in 2024.
The talent show on August 17 at Bao Box was followed by the 2023 Miss & Mrs India Kenya pageant at the Broadwalk Mall.
Since 2016, Eventique has hosted The Miss India Kenya, and most recently, The Mrs. India Kenya, which will take place in 2021.

There were 11 finalists in the Miss category and 9 finalists in the Mrs. category this year. Pranav Pancholi, Susan Kaittany, Lolita Kozyreva, Ahmed Hafez, Farah Esmail, and Farouk Jannedy made up the panel of judges.
The performance featured a number of runways, including a safari-themed runway, with contestants parading next to a guest drummer and guitarist.

Angela Muiruri and Jamil Alibhai served as the event’s emcees and guided the audience through the top 5 questions and answers.
Ushma Khetia Samani was named Mrs. India Kenya in 2023, while Soumya Uppal was named Miss India Kenya in 2023.

Following the competition, Eventique and the winners donate to charities like Women4Cancer and the Hawkers Market Girls Center.
According to Aliza Rajan, director of Eventique, “This year we launched the Aliza Rajan foundation, a non-governmental organization established to uplift and empower women from rural areas of Kenya through the teaching of basic entrepreneurial skills and ultimately assisting them to establish small-scale businesses to earn an income.”

Both winners will represent Kenya on a global stage at Miss India Worldwide 2024 the following year.

Miss India Worldwide builds on a rich tradition of pageants like the Miss India New York and the Miss India USA Pageants, which have been held annually since 1980. Miss India Worldwide is produced by the IFC, a pioneer organization in conducting Indian pageants and fashion shows in the USA and worldwide.

Content courtesy of Capital Fm, Miss/Mrs India Kenya & NFH

The Grand Finale Of Miss And Mrs. India Kenya 2023 Dazzles The Audience.

An Overview of Miss & Mrs. India Kenya 2023’s Grand Finale
The Broadwalk Mall came into the spotlight on the romantic evening of August 19, creating the scene for a night of splendor and grace as the Miss & Mrs. India Kenya 2023 grand finale took place. After the captivating talent show at Bao Box on August 17, excitement was high for a party that expertly mixed class, empowerment, and style.
Since holding the famous Miss India Kenya pageant in 2016, Eventique, the driving force behind this illustrious event, has served as a beacon of Indian culture and empowerment. Continuing their history, they expanded the platform in 2021 by introducing the Mrs. India Kenya category and showcasing the inspiring stories of married ladies.

With 11 excellent contestants competing for the Miss title and 9 exceptional women competing for the Mrs. title, this year’s pageant had an impressive lineup of finalists. A prestigious team of judges, including notables like Pranav Pancholi, Susan Kaittany, Lolita Kozyreva, Ahmed Hafez, Farah Esmail, and Farouk Jannedy, were tasked with choosing the winners.
The energetic emcees Jamil Alibhai and Angela Muiruri presided over the event. From the introduction of the inspirational contestants to the intensive top 5 question and answer session that displayed their humor and intelligence, their captivating presence led the audience through every moment.

The evening’s soul was captured in the dramatic crowning moments. Ushma Khetia Samani won the prestigious title of Mrs. India Kenya 2023, while Soumya Uppal was named Miss India Kenya 2023.
These remarkable ladies represented true empowerment via their strength of character as well as their beauty and grace.

The significance of the event went beyond the glitz and glitter and included social responsibility.
Highlighting the event’s dedication to social change, Eventique and the newly crowned queens committed their support to Women4Cancer and the Hawkers Market Girls Center.

The inspiring event’s creator, Aliza Rajan, got up on stage and gave a moving statement. Aliza thanked the distinguished attendees, participants, and partners for their assistance in making the First joint Miss and Mrs. India Worldwide Kenya 2023 Gala Night a reality.
She commended the candidates on their wonderful trip and emphasized the ties formed by the commitment of women of various ages and backgrounds.

Aliza’s words captured the spirit of the pageant, which was one of empowerment, teamwork, and personal development.
The Aliza Rajan Foundation, a non-governmental organization devoted to empowering women in rural Kenya via the acquisition of crucial entrepreneurship skills, was also unveiled by Aliza Rajan, the inspirational director of Eventique.

This program closely aligns with the pageant’s mission to promote empowerment and open doors for long-term development.
The Miss & Mrs. India Kenya 2023 Grand Finale’s conclusion signaled the start of a new era for the titleholders as well as the end of an event.
Kenya will be represented by Soumya Uppal and Ushma Khetia Samani at The Miss India Worldwide 2024, a prominent competition organized by the IFC, a global pioneer in Indian pageants and fashion events.

Content courtesy of Go Places, Miss/Mrs India Kenya & NFH 

Kenyan Fashion Designers Protest Textile Waste With Their Designs

Nairobi’s secondhand clothing market serves as both an inspiration and a backdrop for the fashion industry.
When vendors at Gikomba, the biggest flea market in East Africa, begin setting up their goods on low wooden stalls, dawn has barely begun to paint the sky with a gentle gray tinge.
They carefully organize the secondhand clothing they purchase by weight into enormous sealed plastic bundles by category. a heap of denim.
Tennis shoes stacked high. Bras of all colors and sizes are neatly arranged in a row.
Despite the early hour, throngs of people pack the cramped Kenyan market lanes as vendors shout over one another to promote their wares.

When a trader opens a fresh shipment, the tension increases. Shoppers swarm the area looking for “cameras”. “Items that resemble clothing you would see in a magazine or on television. Isichy Shanicky, a 21-year-old designer at the Maisha by Nisria Collective, said, “That needs to be captured on camera.
She effortlessly maneuvers through Gikomba’s mazes by adhering to its unspoken norms, just like millions of other Kenyans do.

“Arrive early. When a fresh product is opened, you should be present, she advised. “Strip off. The vendor will assess your price by looking at you.
Hold onto a piece you like if you see one. Or someone person will seize your priceless discovery.
Because secondhand shopping is so common, it has its own terminology and manners.

A significant portion of the Kenyan economy is devoted to used clothing imported from overseas. They cost the nation $169 million to import in 2021.
Sixty-five thousand individuals are employed by the Gikomba market alone. The environment and the struggling home textile industry, according to critics, are sacrificed in the process.
At Gikomba, Nicholas Kilonzi began his professional life. Following the passing of his father in 2009, the family was unable to support Kilonzi’s tuition costs.
After landing his first job assisting a dealer in used shoes, he eventually saved enough cash to launch his own company, which presently has three employees.

Kilonzi’s profitability has decreased over time along with the quality of the clothing that is imported from abroad.

We find maybe 10 cameras when we open a 62kg (137lb) package, he claimed. “Five years ago, there would have been 40 or 35.”
The non-camera items, which include cheap, torn, or worn-out clothing, are sold for 50 shillings ($0.35) each.
The leftovers are either turned into commercial rugs or dumped along the banks of the Nairobi River, which flows close to Gikomba.
A third of all clothing is made of plastic garbage, which will degrade into contaminating particles for the earth and the ocean.

One effect of the fast fashion business is the colorful mountains of discarded apparel that line the river’s banks. Such scenes are now commonplace in the Global South, far from the glitzy catwalks and brightly lit storefronts of the world’s fashion capitals.

Nairobi Fashion Week’s creative team planned a photo shoot near the trash to expose the social and environmental crimes of the industry. Its Just Fashion campaign, which runs from April to November, includes the photo session.

“We are not attempting to combat used. It gives millions of people access to affordable apparel and work.
To make fashion sustainable, we support informed consumer decisions and legislative regulations.
Idah Garette, an environmental activist and shot participant, remarked that what people buy has an impact.

Idah is wearing an organic silk dress by Deepa Dosaja, a high-end Kenyan designer who is at the forefront of advocating ethical fashion choices, in marketing photographs. The outfit has hand-painted sustainability slogans.
Dosaja declared, “I have noticed a positive shift. “People who once shopped in Dubai or London now take pride in wearing Kenyan clothing.
Not only is ethical fashion better for the environment.
It generates respectable and worthwhile jobs.
Young designers are already reshaping Kenya’s fashion industry and its long-standing, contentious relationship with discarded clothing.
A new fashion house is called Maisha by Nisria. Its designers, who range in age from 21 to 28, produce unique creations using recycled clothing and leftover textiles.

Shopping at places like Gikomba helps them express their creativity and lessens the negative effects of their industry on the environment.

Conde Tausi, a 28-year-old designer, believes that using secondhand began as a need and later evolved into a goal. “You touch a piece, and it speaks to you,” she says. “I didn’t have the funds to purchase materials when I first experimented with my designs.  leftover clothing from her wardrobe. I eventually realized that the wardrobe was cleaner.
And I pondered whether we would be able to accomplish this on a global basis.

Content courtesy Al Jazeera & NFH 

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