Dakar Fashion Week didn’t just push boundaries this year, it sailed right past them.
For its 23rd edition, the iconic West African fashion festival transformed the Atlantic Ocean into a runway, turning brightly painted Senegalese fishing boats (pirogues) into floating catwalks. Models balanced on ropes as waves rocked the boats, fabrics caught the wind, and spectators watched from nearby vessels.
For many, this was a bold fashion spectacle and certainly one for the books.
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A Runway Rooted in Culture and Memory

Adama Paris, founder of Dakar Fashion Week, has long insisted that African fashion is more than aesthetics. Adama believes it is storytelling and this edition made that message impossible to ignore with the ocean itself becoming part of the story.
The choice of location wasn’t a gimmick. It was a statement. In Senegal, the Atlantic isn’t just scenery. It depicts livelihood, history, migration, loss, survival. Here, fishing boats carried stories long before they carried nets. Therefore, turning them into runways symbolised the very core of Dakar. For the fashion record books, this was creativity grounded in heritage, identity, and lived experience.
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Designers Who Matched the Ocean’s Energy
More than 30 designers from Senegal, Ghana, Congo, Morocco, Côte d’Ivoire, Europe and beyond showcased collections that carried the weight of craft and culture.
- Parfait Ikuba (Congo) showcased sweeping silhouettes, dramatic headpieces, and gowns that rose with the tide.

- Ganda Wear (Senegal) leaned into warm browns and rust resortwear with cowrie details and sculptural hair.

- Service Alkhoum (Senegal) floated airy off-white cottons shaped by the ocean breeze.

- Ngorbatchev (Senegal) debuted architecture-sharp tailoring influenced by African traditional costume.
- INSPIRED (Congo) wove raffia, lace, denim, cowries, coconut fibre and tulle into textures layered with history

- Adama Paris closed with a burst of vibrant colour; models barefoot, crowned in flowers, fabrics dancing in the wind.

The result was not just spectacle or gimmick. We witnessed a living archive of African imagination.
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A New Model for Fashion Weeks
By staging a runway on water, Dakar Fashion Week rejected the sterile Western blueprint. No velvet ropes, no industrial halls, no artificial gloss. This was a fashion week showcasing culture, courage, and an environment that amplified every stitch.
Dakar Fashion Week redefined what a runway can be and where African stories can live. And as images of models standing tall on rocking boats continue to sweep across the internet, it becomes even clearer.