AFWN 2025: Designer Spotlight, Influencer Feature & Festival Experiences
As we count down to Africa Fashion Week Nigeria 2025, we continue to spotlight the remarkable creatives, storytellers, and cultural voices shaping this year’s edition.
As we count down to Africa Fashion Week Nigeria 2025, we continue to spotlight the remarkable creatives, storytellers, and cultural voices shaping this year’s edition.
Entertainment Week Africa returns November 17–22, 2026, continuing its commitment to talent mobility, industry access and pan-African creative exchange.
Africa Fashion Week Nigeria shares highlights from its recent feature on TVC, where their Founder, HRM Olori Ronke Ademiluyi-Ogunwusi, discussed the vision and driving force behind this year’s Africa Fashion Week Nigeria.
Nourishment, a multidisciplinary exhibition by Leonard Iheagwam (Soldier), opened this past weekend at Nahous, Lagos’s newest culturallandmark housed within the historic Old Federal Palace Hotel.
This past weekend, designer Tia Adeola made a triumphant return to her roots with the unveiling of her latest collection, From Lagos With Love, at GTCO Fashion Weekend in Lagos.
Entertainment Week Africa (EWA) is set to return from November 18 to 23, 2025, bringing together Africa’s creative community for six days of screenings, showcases, and conversations across Lagos.
In Commemoration of its 15th anniversary, Orange Culture unveils "Letter to Her" - a deeply personal collection by creative director Adebayo Oke-Lawal, dedicated to his late mother.
After ten years of shaping the modern African feminine silhouette, The Ladymaker steps into a bold new era with “Graffiti”.
Translating to “sweetness” in Yoruba, "Adun" embodies the quiet confidence, softness, and strength that make every woman beautiful—no matter her shape, story, or stage in life.
Day 5 truly brought Lagos Fashion Week 2025 to a memorable close, wrapping up an exciting week with a powerful mix of fashion and cultural celebration.
As Lagos Fashion Week enters its fifth and final day, one thing is clear: African designers are not just creating fashion — they are composing identity, memory, and movement into fabric.
