Showing posts with label beyond african print. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beyond african print. Show all posts

Pieces of Africa: Adinkra//Duro Olowu, Spring 2010

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It's amazing the little treasures you discover when you look most things over. We featured Duro Olowu's Spring 2010 collection a while ago and re-visited it several weeks ago, charmed by a little but significant detail we hadn't noticed before. Olowu's distinct floral print shares the spotlight with print adinkra symbols, famous in Ghana and Cote d'Ivoire for their hidden meanings, not unlike kanga print in that respect. In a world where "African print" has practically become synonymous with Africa's fashion scene, it's great to see other cultural influences seep through. Africa is by no means only good for one thing and there's certainly more where ankara (dutch wax/"african print") and adinkra came from.

Several Duro Olowu pieces are available online courtesy of Couture Lab and Barneys.

Happy shopping!

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[click to enlarge]

Connect with Duro Olowu:

Website

XO

P.S. Image II courtesy of Duro Olowu.

Beyond African Print: Fulani Earrings



[photos - google + siris]

While several out-of-Africa or Africa-inspired brands are content with interpreting and re-interpreting African Print [nothing wrong with that], several others go a step further to incorporate other authentically African elements that are perhaps less obvious. Take Fulani earrings or kwottenai, for instance. They're handcrafted in Mali and are typically worn by Fulani women who are said to place a great emphasis on physical appearance and wear these "elaborate" gold [and sometimes brass] earrings to turn attention in their direction. A few facts, according to The Bowers Museum:

o o o

"The amount of jewelry worn by a woman depends on her age, status and where she lives"

The earrings are made from "pounded gold and wrapped...with red yarn...over time gold is added to the earrings increasing their size and value; the increase signifies the individual's and family's accumulated wealth"

"Each earring can weigh more than half a pound" 

"A woman usually acquires her kwottenai...at her marriage as a gift from her husband or when her mother dies."

o o o

Clearly, these earrings play both clearly-defined cultural and symbolic roles. We wonder if folks who wear them know or care about their historical origins. Should this matter? You decide. Nonetheless, the inspired interpretations we've seen on the runway and in collections have been considerably tamer - well, smaller and lighter mostly, but they still pay homage to Fulani women in their own way:


[click to enlarge]

Most recently, we spotted these earrings...


...as part of Korto Momolu's collection for Dillard's and immediately recognized the Fulani influence. Evidently, Africa can and continues to inspire beyond African print.

Do you own a pair?

XO

Photos from collage:

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