Hartford Courant (Sunday)

African prints getting new attention

- By Shira Telushkin

The recent outpouring of support for Black-owned businesses has brought attention to fashion labels that work with African prints. The labels, many of them founded by West African designers living in the United States and Britain, are turning the traditiona­l patterns of West African fabric into contempora­ry American silhouette­s.

“May was our biggest month ever, and June is going to be bigger than May,” said Addie Elabor, founder and designer of D’iyanu, an African print label introduced in 2014.

Nicolette Orji, also known as Nikki Billie Jean, founder of the All Things Ankara blog and a designer herself, was similarly upbeat. “Anyone who is selling anything online right now is feeling that support, and it’s amazing — though kind of overdue.”

While the largest market for most of these designers is Black people born and raised in America, success this year has also brought new buyers.

“When I first released my masks, one of my white friends texted me to say, ‘Can I buy this, or would that be a bad idea?’ ” said Maya Lake, founder of Boxing Kitten, the label that is often credited as one of the first to put ankara print on the American fashion radar.

“I said she should buy it. I mean, especially now if you want to support Black-owned businesses. I think it’s fine.”

But, Lake said, there is an important distinctio­n between nonBlack buyers using their money to support Black designers and non-Black designers using African-associated prints to make money for themselves.

“As a Black American, I relate to the fabric in a different way,” she said. “If someone doesn’t have a personal connection, culturally, to the fabric, that’s not cool,” she said, referring to fashion houses such as Stella McCartney, which got pushback for using ankara prints. “Just going to a place and studying a thing doesn’t mean you

can co-opt it to make money.”

The distinctio­n between buyers and designers is an important one for many in the industry.

“I would like to see African print everywhere,” said Yetunde Olukoya, a Nigerian-born designer who moved to the United States with her husband when she was 26. “As long as it’s made in Africa and puts value back into the people who actually made this fashion popular, then I would love to see it worn all over the world.”

Ray Darten, the label she started in her living room in 2016 with 160 pieces she sewed by hand, now employs more than 100 workers in Nigeria.

For Olukoya, ankara print clothing counters the narratives that too often associate much of Africa with poverty and disease.

“Americans needed to learn that there are beautiful things that come out of here,” she said.

Olukoya estimates that about 80% of her customer base is African American.

For Elabor, who moved to the United States from Nigeria as a child, it is important that any designer who popularize­s African print be of African descent. “Otherwise, it would make it seem like we had to wait for another race to come and use this before the world could see it as popular,” she said.

Orji, of All Things Ankara, has seen a sharp increase in white buyers on her site in the last month, a trend she welcomes. She does publish photograph­s of non-Black models in ankara print. “If we want these prints to go viral, then we need more people

to use them,” she said.

Part of what is driving the current conversati­on is that while African-born designers see African print as a way to spread their culture, they are selling it in a country that has its own separate history and relationsh­ip to these fabrics.

Many people in America — of all colors — grew up associatin­g African print clothing with expression­s of Black pride, based on its popularity during the civil rights era and its use in the Black Power movement as a way to show solidarity and connection with one’s African heritage. They see the fashion not as a way to spread African culture but to reclaim it.

“The first time a customer cried in one of my pop-up shops, I didn’t know what to do,” said

Olukoya of Ray Darten. “But then as she began to explain to me how she felt, I started crying as well. I’m Nigerian, I know where I am from, and I can’t imagine what it would feel like if I didn’t know where I was from. It’s not just about the clothes on the racks. It’s about being confident in them and confident in the culture.”

Other designers see their African heritage as a point of departure from which they can bring something new to the global fashion scene.

“As I sat on vacation, looking basic because I had nothing else to wear, I decided to start pursuing swimsuits,” Buki Ade said about why she founded Bfyne, a swimwear company known for its innovative use of straps, sleeves and prints drawn from her Nigerian heritage.

“In these designs, you can walk into the room, and you don’t have to say a word because your outfit has already introduced you,” she said. “It’s a vibe.”

Recent months have brought more attention, including in Allure and Elle, magazines she believes would not have known about her label if not for a heightened awareness of Black designers. She is grateful for the attention but finds it hard to think about the reason so many Black designers are suddenly being given the spotlight.

Scot Brown, an associate professor at UCLA and a historian of African American social movements and popular culture, is not worried about whether ankara print will lose its significan­ce for the African American community if it goes mainstream. Although he loves his D’iyanu blazers, he sees the innovative use of this print for Western business clothes as another sign that African fashion will constantly evolve and adapt to changing conditions.

“When something goes mainstream, there is always some new undergroun­d thing happening,” Brown said, adding that expression­s of Black pride will simply evolve and take up new forms. “Africa style is such a vast, almost infinite body of creativity that you don’t ever have to worry about running out of creative gas.”

 ?? MICHAEL STARGHILL JR./THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? “I would like to see African print everywhere,” said designer Yetunde Olukoya, at her home in Fulshear, Texas.
MICHAEL STARGHILL JR./THE NEW YORK TIMES “I would like to see African print everywhere,” said designer Yetunde Olukoya, at her home in Fulshear, Texas.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States