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Stèlà Textile tells Nigerians stories on fabric

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According to Leanne Prain, author of Strange Material: Storytelling through Textiles, textiles play an important role in communicating our histories.

“Systematically underrepresented in art history,” she writes, “textiles often carry the stories of those whom society overlooks: women, children, slaves, immigrants, Aboriginal peoples, housewives, stay-at-home fathers, the ill, the disappeared, the displaced, and the grieving … knitting, weaving, embroidery – no matter what the medium is, textiles are both by-products and generators of narrative.”


Pictures: stella_textile_design_studio Instagram

It was this potential for storytelling that led graphic and web designer Ify Ojo to abandon the security of a nine-to-five desk job and embrace her passion for textile design. Ojo grew up in Nigeria, but has since relocated to Winnipeg Manitoba, Canada, where she runs her design studio, Stèlà Textile. Here, she produces beautifully unique fabrics that explore her African heritage and connect the wearer to stories that resonate with them. As an immigrant and a member of a minority group, she had long felt frustrated by her own stories being lumped into one collective whole. She began producing her distinctive fabrics to challenge the world’s monolithic views of Africa.

Ojo writes on her website: “By creating modern, urban influenced designs that capture the vibes and expressions of a sparkling African life in contrast to the dreary and uninspiring stories often shown in the media, my fabric designs challenge you to look at the old with new eyes, juxtaposing ancient symbols with modern day objects.”

Influenced by what she calls Nigeria’s highly expressive culture, Ojo’s designs are characterised by vivid colours, cheekily drawn imagery and unexpected silhouettes. Her beautiful prints pay tribute to the variety of women she’s known during her life in Nigeria; her All My Aunties collection, for example, salutes every family who has an “aunt that’s a drama queen, a storyteller, a prayer warrior, a fashionista, a no filter say-it-as-it-is aunt”.

“I tell stories that are drawn from the shared experiences of women – stories that honour and celebrate women, especially women in the minority,” she says.

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