Labels that go bold
Big, expressive and colorful prints echo through the fall 2017 fashion collections in an international hybrid of themes that stretches across centuries and continents. Veteran labels such as Dolce & Gabbana, Etro and Erdem have embraced the trend, which also encompasses the bright, batik style of African prints. Emerging designers also are expanding the reach of traditional and contemporary African prints by using them rather unconventionally. Here are labels and a retailer bringing a modern spin to the historic cloth. Kiki Clothing: London-born Titi Ademola established Kiki Clothing in Ghana’s Accra Mall, where international customers buy her collection of premade, African-print styles (ready-towear is a rarity in Africa).
“I want people from around the world not to feel overwhelmed or intimidated by the prints or the colors,” she said. kikiclothing.com Dent de Man: Alexis Temomanin, designer of Dent de Man menswear, has sold his African-print collection internationally to upscale stores including Barneys New York.
Temomanin’s clothing isn’t just fashion. It’s autobiography. The Côte d’Ivoire-born designer said the patterns, such as a spider caught in a web, reflect his search for healing from a difficult life journey. www.dentdeman.com Zuvaa: During the new exhibition’s weekend opening, the Fowler had a pop-up shop of African print designs from online marketplace Zuvaa, which gives dozens of African designers on the continent and in the diaspora access to a global marketplace for their contemporary and one-of-a-kind clothes and accessories for men, women and children. zuvaa.com
Zuri: In Malibu, a recent independent pop-up shop featured Zuri, a collection by California designers Sandra Zhao and Ashleigh Miller, who sell simple shift dresses cut from distinctive, almost Pop-art versions of African prints.
“Something previously associated with Africa we are translating for the American eye and the European eye,” Zhao said. “We think of ourselves fitting into this larger story of these textiles, given that we are not African. The story of these textiles is that of a larger, global narrative.” www.shopzuri.com