Style-conscious Africans turn compulsory masks into fashion accessories

Nigerian style influencer Angel Obasi. Picture: Reuters

Nigerian style influencer Angel Obasi. Picture: Reuters

Published May 15, 2020

Share

Nigerian fashion designer Sefiya

Diejomaoh likes to wear bright, bold clothes to match her

personality. She believes a global pandemic should not get in

the way of her sense of style.

The mask she wears, which has become compulsory attire as

Nigeria tries to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus, is

the centrepiece of her ensemble. Gold-coloured and studded with

sparkling diamante jewels, it matches her floor-length dress.

Nigerian fashion stylist Sefiya Diejomoah. Picture: Reuters

"When you come out in a stylish mask or with an accessory

such as this, it doesn't seem as though we're fighting a war. It

seems more fun," said Diejomaoh, as she dresses at her home in

Lagos to meet a client.

Nigerian fashion stylist, Angela Innocent. Picture: Reuters

Many African countries have made it compulsory to wear masks

in public to prevent the spread of the sometimes fatal Covid-19

respiratory disease.

Fashion lovers in the continent's biggest cities are

combining style and safety by donning colourful masks, sometimes

coordinating the fabric with their outfits.

Nigerian style influencer, Angel Obasi, 24, poses for a picture with a fabric face mask on, with colours matching her clothes, following the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Lagos

The push to make masks stylish has taken off in other parts

of the world. In places like Lebanon, businesses have switched

from the production of furniture and clothing to striking masks.

In Africa, the trend is proving a boon to local tailors and

designers who are making the masks.

Fashion designer Sophie Zinga, based in Senegal's capital,

Dakar, said she decided to create masks from organic cotton

after realizing that some form of protective clothing measures

could be needed for the next two years.

Fashion designer Sophie Zinga poses at her workshop in Dakar. Picture: Reuters

"We are going to have to adapt and live with this virus,"

she said.

"As a fashion designer I think we are going to have to

integrate each outfit with fashion masks," added Zinga, who

created a digital platform, fashionfightscovid19.com, for the

masks.

Far from Dakar, in South Africa's commercial hub of

Johannesburg, upmarket leather accessories store Inga Atelier is

creating masks.

In a country that has imposed some of Africa's most

stringent lockdown measures and has been left reeling from the

economic impact, the company's creative director said the move

made sense.

"My business has been heavily affected in such a sense that

the retail is on lockdown," said Inga Gubeka. "There was a big

shortage, we realised, of masks that can be usable every day

without having to throw it away."

Her company's masks combine leather with multicoloured

fabrics including traditional South African Ndebele prints.

Back in Nigeria's Lagos, as she adjusted her glimmering gold

mask before setting out into sub-Saharan Africa's most populous

city of 20 million people, Diejomaoh said a small piece of

fabric had become a way to express herself.

"People going around in surgical masks is depressing," she

said. "I have to maintain status quo and who I am despite the

situation."

Reuters

Related Topics: