Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop
No Result
View All Result
Dream Wired
No Result
View All Result
Home Celebrity

Designer Spotlight: Samuel Boakye, The Menswear Designer Inspired By His Ghanaian-American Roots – Essence

rmtsa by rmtsa
January 20, 2025
in Celebrity
0
Designer Spotlight: Samuel Boakye, The Menswear Designer Inspired By His Ghanaian-American Roots – Essence
74
SHARES
1.2k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


You might also like

Meagan Good Celebrates 44th Birthday With Jonathan Majors

The Rousseau Sisters Want to Change The Way You Experience Jamaican Food

Serena Williams Reveals 31-Pound Weight Loss With Zepbound

Kwasi Paul

Samuel Boakye finds purpose in synthesizing the creativity of diasporic culture. It’s how he makes sense of the world. His early musical influences, Teddy Pendergrass and Fela Kuti, and his father’s affinity for the global Black musical tradition shaped Boakye’s appreciation for the diaspora’s expansive art styles. 

Growing up as a first-generation Ghanaian-American in Queens, New York, he always felt deeply connected to both African and Black American culture. Inside the home, he was immersed in the rich culture of his family’s homeland, while outside he also embraced Western society and the culture Black Americans constructed within it. Boakye’s initial love of music led him to explore different creative mediums, eventually bringing him to design. With a music-loving father and a FIT-trained designer mother, Boakye felt encouraged to explore the arts, even if as a pass time, to start. After all, his design label Kwasi Paul is named after both of them.

Kwasi Paul

“It’s an ode to them,” he explains. “If it wasn’t for them, I wouldn’t be here, and the brand wouldn’t even exist. A lot of my inspiration comes from them: how they manage to [navigate] Western society, how they manage to go through the world and challenges, and how they exposed me to different parts of culture.” 

Between picking up tips from his mother, burying his nose in her old sketches and textbooks, assisting friends with their clothing lines, and picking up design classes at Los Angeles Trade-Technical College between his corporate nine-to-five, Boakye’s learning process was fueled by sheer curiosity and passion for the craft. This fascination with design seeps through the stitches of his fashion label.

“Kwasi Paul is really like my diary, in a sense. A lot of what I draw inspiration from is my experiences growing up in the in-between,” he begins, before telling me that my use of the word “curiosity” struck him. “I came to realize that I didn’t know too much about my ancestral background and roots, and I’m just curious about the future of the world and what that looks like for the people of the diaspora.”

Courtesy of Samuel Boakye

Expanding on the notion of the in-between world he occupies, he calls attention to two of his collections. “Market Symphonies” was inspired by the African market Boakye shared. He adds that to anyone else in New York, it just might be an African market, but to him and other Ghanaian-Americans, it holds high significance. “I drew inspiration from the spices, the colors, and the communal aspect [of the environment]. The ‘Amerikan Dreamin’‘ collection is an ode to those who made it here, and also those who look at it as this land of honey.”

He goes on to explain how the latter collection draws from the nostalgia of ‘70s and ‘80s American style, such as boot cuts and bell bottoms, married with classic elements such as cowrie shells. The former collection depicts the idea of a world within a world, the comfort that can be found, and the conversations it ignites. 

Designing at the crossroads between African and Black American life gives Boakye a deeper appreciation of the cultural connections and pushes him to be intentional with his production. His design label adopts the Ghanaian tradition of weaving fabric on an heirloom, to create fugu cloth. He believes his clothing, all made in Ghana, sparks needed conversation about the work of African designers and the legacy they are building. 

He describes those living within the world of Kwasi Paul as “future ancestors,” who embrace the fluidity of their heritage and set out to guide those that will follow long after they are gone. In the same vein, he believes that not only are your ancestors always with you, a quote he returns to frequently, but also that he is his ancestors, because they live within him. Therefore, “how I show respect to them is by showing myself and others respect too because we’re somehow always interconnected.” In his words, the Kwasi Paul consumer is anyone belonging to the diaspora, which could mean the African diaspora encompassing the Americas and the Caribbean, but also the larger immigrant diaspora, and anyone who can identify with occupying space within two worlds. It’s the idea of embracing a new society while still keeping your traditions alive. 

Kwasi Paul

Boakye weaves a story of a global culture through both messaging and design details. Consider: smartly tailored suits constructed with his own textiles and graphics meld Western and African elements. He highlights how the use of suits signals a sort of assimilation to the post-colonial influence of Western dressing, while his manipulation of fabrics, prints, and accessories applies Ghanaian influence to Western wear. 

“A lot of what happens within this Western world influences the rest of the world, and it has had a major influence in parts of Africa, especially Ghana. I’m also telling narratives based upon how Ghanians view the Western world,” Boakye shared. 

Going back to his first love of music, Boakye employs that medium to construct his brand narratives. So much so, that his “Rhythm and Roots” collection came complete with an original EP. “I feel like music is one of the strongest languages. You don’t even have to understand what the lyrics are, but you know the kind of feeling they put you in.” To him, music and fashion are intimately connected, as they both inform movement, performance, and expression. “Music causes emotion, it inspires movement. When I think about movement, I also think about how my clothes are made, going back to the flares, how they move, and if they’re comfortable—if they make you feel good. As a designer, I like to combine different elements of art, and I feel like combining music and fashion opens a portal to a lot of creativity.”

This idea of fusion bubbles up yet again, through his cultural identities, creative outlets, and how he seeks to move the brand forward. Forward-looking, Boakye aims to expand the Kwasi Paul universe through creative direction and design, not exclusive to fashion.



Source link

Tags: BoakyeDesignerEssenceGhanaianAmericanInspiredMenswearrootsSamuelSpotlight
Share30Tweet19
rmtsa

rmtsa

Recommended For You

Meagan Good Celebrates 44th Birthday With Jonathan Majors

by rmtsa
August 24, 2025
0
Meagan Good Celebrates 44th Birthday With Jonathan Majors

Meagan Good celebrated her 44th birthday in Cartagena, Colombia with husband Jonathan Majors and her family by her side. Source: Tommaso Boddi / Getty The actress let her...

Read more

The Rousseau Sisters Want to Change The Way You Experience Jamaican Food

by rmtsa
August 23, 2025
0
The Rousseau Sisters Want to Change The Way You Experience Jamaican Food

They’ve hosted royals, elevated island flavors, and now they’re letting you in on one of their signature dishes. For Jamaican chefs Suzanne and Michelle Rousseau, food, quite literally,...

Read more

Serena Williams Reveals 31-Pound Weight Loss With Zepbound

by rmtsa
August 23, 2025
0
Serena Williams Reveals 31-Pound Weight Loss With Zepbound

Source: ANGELA WEISS Serena Williams is finally sharing the truth about her drastic weight change.  The tennis legend’s Instagram posts over the last few weeks have left her...

Read more

Ciara Slams Spectators Who Call Husband Russell Wilson A ‘Simp’

by rmtsa
August 22, 2025
0
Ciara Slams Spectators Who Call Husband Russell Wilson A ‘Simp’

Ciara isn’t concerned with anyone calling her man “corny.” Source: Amy Sussman / Getty The singer stopped by The Breakfast Club for an interview on Friday, Aug 22,...

Read more

Harlem’s Fashion Row To Honor Ruth E. Carter At 18th Annual Fashion Show & Style Awards – Essence

by rmtsa
August 22, 2025
0
Harlem’s Fashion Row To Honor Ruth E. Carter At 18th Annual Fashion Show & Style Awards – Essence

Brandice Daniel and Harlem’s Fashion Row have successfully heightened the visibility of Black designers for years. By celebrating multicultural talent, since 2007, Harlem’s Fashion Row has been able...

Read more
Next Post
Who Is Von Miller’s Girlfriend? Megan Denise’s Job & Instagram

Who Is Von Miller's Girlfriend? Megan Denise's Job & Instagram

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized

CATEGORIES

  • Celebrity
  • Comics
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • Music
  • TV
  • Uncategorized
No Result
View All Result

Recent News

  • Meagan Good Celebrates 44th Birthday With Jonathan Majors
  • Filmmakers Urge Venice to Take Stand on Gaza in Open Letter
  • Watch Mastodon Pay Tribute to Late Ex-Guitarist Brent Hinds

Copyright © 2023 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Celebrity
  • DramaAlert
  • Gossip
  • Movie
  • TV
  • Music
  • Comics
  • Shop

Copyright © 2023 DramaWired.
DramaWired is a content aggregator and not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In