AfroWema · Africa International Design Awards 2026
AfroWema Wins
the Avant-Garde Award
As featured in Afrique Magazine
Savage Beauty Heritage has been named winner of the Avant-Garde prize at the inaugural Africa International Design Awards, recognised in the pages of Afrique Magazine alongside some of the continent's most exciting design talent.
A Landmark Recognition
AfroWema, named avant-gardeAfrique Magazine has named AfroWema among the winners of the very first Africa International Design Awards (AIDA), recognising the Savage Beauty Heritage collection with the prize for Avant-Garde. It is one of the most meaningful endorsements AfroWema has received to date, placed by a panel built specifically to reward design that does more than look good.
The inaugural AIDA jury brought together 41 judges from 18 nationalities, including designer Selly Raby Kane, Africa Fashion Foundation founder Roberta Annan, and designer Bibi Seck. Together, they evaluated more than 300 projects across four major categories: Spatial, Product, Fashion, and Communication.
Award Won
Avant-Garde
Savage Beauty Heritage
41
Judges, 18 nationalities
300+
Projects evaluated
22
Fashion sub-category awards
What the Magazine Said
In Afrique Magazine's own wordsAfrique Magazine described Savage Beauty Heritage as a patchwork collection made from recycled denim, placing AfroWema alongside a striking group of African design talent in this inaugural edition. The judging criteria went well beyond aesthetics: the panel weighed cultural resonance, durability, social impact, and innovation. Twenty-two sub-categories for fashion creators alone contributed to what the magazine called an unprecedented result.
AfroWema appears in the same feature as some of the continent's most respected emerging names: Lohije, the Nigerian label blending denim offcuts with traditional diakwu and sakala fabrics; Cape Cobra, Justine Schafer's accessories line inspired by the Karoo; and Kente Gentleman, Aristide Loua's handwoven Sika costume from Senufo cloth. Good company for a brand born in Kibera.
"The submissions remind us that fashion has a real impact on our lives, well beyond appearances."
Afrique Magazine, on the AIDA Awards 2026Judged by the Best
A jury built for substance, not spectacleWhat sets the AIDA Awards apart from a typical fashion accolade is the calibre and breadth of the people doing the judging. The panel was not assembled from critics and editors alone. It included practitioners who have spent careers building the very infrastructure of African design: Selly Raby Kane, the Senegalese designer known for pushing the boundaries of Afrofuturist fashion, Roberta Annan, founder of the Africa Fashion Foundation and one of the continent's most influential voices in fashion investment, and Bibi Seck, the Senegalese-American designer whose product work spans furniture, transport, and architecture.
Forty-one judges. Eighteen nationalities. A single mandate: find the projects across the continent that are not simply beautiful, but meaningful. For a panel like that to single out Savage Beauty Heritage from more than 300 submissions is a statement about where AfroWema now sits in the broader conversation about African design.
The fashion category alone carried 22 sub-category awards, a number that speaks to how seriously the inaugural edition treated the discipline. Rather than crowning a single winner, the AIDA jury chose to recognise the many different ways fashion can matter: through innovation, through cultural depth, through durability, through the social weight a garment can carry once it leaves the studio.
Why Savage Beauty Won
Designed to mean somethingSavage Beauty Heritage was never built to chase trends. Every piece begins as discarded denim, rescued through our partnership with Mr. Green Africa, and is reborn through the hands of tailors, designers, and youth from Kibera. It is patchwork in the truest sense: fragments of waste, stitched into something that did not exist before, carrying the story of where it came from in every seam.
That is precisely what the AIDA jury was built to reward: not just craft, but the resonance behind it. A collection's right to win an Avant-Garde prize is earned by proving that the old idea of luxury, defined by excess, can be replaced by something built on intention, transparency, and care for the people who make the clothes.
There is also a quieter reason this collection resonates with juries and audiences alike. Each garment in Savage Beauty Heritage is genuinely one of a kind. Because the denim is upcycled and the Kitenge panels are cut from limited fabric runs, no two pieces are identical. That is not a limitation of the process. It is the entire point. In an industry built on mass production and disposability, a collection that can never be exactly replicated is its own quiet act of rebellion.
This recognition arrives in the same season Savage Beauty Heritage walked two runways at Circular Sustainable Fashion Week Madrid. From London, to Madrid, to the pages of Afrique Magazine, the collection continues to prove what is possible when fashion is made differently from the very first stitch.
What This Means Going Forward
A milestone, not a finish lineAn award like this carries weight beyond the moment it is announced. For AfroWema, the Avant-Garde recognition is a signal to the wider industry, to future collaborators, to fabric partners, to the buyers and stockists who decide which brands get shelf space, that what is happening in Kibera deserves serious attention. It is the kind of validation that opens doors a marketing budget cannot.
It also reinforces something Tatiana has said in nearly every interview AfroWema has given this year: the goal has never been to make a single beautiful collection. The goal is to build an ecosystem, a hub in Kibera that trains, employs, and elevates the community that makes these garments possible. Every award, every runway, every piece of press coverage is a step toward making that hub a reality.
Savage Beauty Heritage will continue to travel. But its win at the AIDA Awards belongs first to the tailors, designers, and young people in Kibera whose hands made the collection what it is. The recognition is theirs as much as it is the brand's.
Worn with pride. Recognised with honour.
The collection that won Avant-Garde at the AIDA Awards is available to shop. Each piece is one of a kind, handcrafted, and built to be worn for life.