Dakar Fashion Week 2025 Day 3: The Runway Moved to the Atlantic

Dakar Fashion Week closed on the Atlantic. For its final day, the runway moved onto the water—traditional pirogues arranged off Ngor Island, held steady by engine boats while models stood along the edges, gripping rope rails. Fabric lifted with the wind. Guests arrived by boat, life jackets on, watching from the water as collections passed.

The pirogue is ordinary in Dakar. Fishermen use them daily. They move people and goods along the coast. Adama Paris turned them into a runway, and the choice matters. This wasn’t a location scouted for aesthetics—it was infrastructure repurposed. The ocean dictated timing. The wind styled the clothes. A fashion week closing that could only happen here.

Eight designers showed.

Ganda Wear — Senegal

Resortwear in browns, nudes, rust. Swim silhouettes with silk and mousseline cover-ups. Cowrie-shell details, sculptural updos. Sensuality kept precise.

Service Alkhoum — Senegal

Mame Cheikh Niang worked in lightweight cottons and natural fibers. Off-white palette, gauzy layers. Sculptural hairstyles referenced Sahelian tree silhouettes. The garments responded to the setting—wind and water shaping the movement.

Parfait Ikuba — Congo

Drama scaled to the ocean. Models stood on pirogues in voluminous gowns, fabric catching the breeze. Headpieces, sculptural silhouettes, coral and foam references. Couture staging that used the setting.

Ngorbatchev — Senegal

Ngorba Niang created the AURA collection one week before the show. Super 100 wool tailoring referencing the costume africain, cut with architectural precision. “A tribute,” Niang said. “Because we don’t honor men enough.” Menswear that holds structure without stiffness.

Loulou Design — Senegal

Alioune Badara Ndione works intuitively. “I give my whole self to the work,” he said. The collection showed that devotion in fabric selection and color—pieces built from instinct rather than concept.

Owens — Senegal

Ousseynou Owens Ndiaye drew from the coastline. Menswear in woven linen and opaque crepe, moving easily. Marine blues, whites, sand tones. Panama hats, silk scarves. Island dressing with proper construction.

INSPIRED — Congo

Malanga Gabrielle Dorcas built the collection from her Bantu heritage. Raffia, denim, lace, tulle. Cowries, wooden beads, coconut fiber detailing. Texture as narrative—each piece carrying material history.

Adama Paris — Senegal

Saturated color at full volume: oranges, reds, purples, yellows. Silhouettes stayed minimal—the palette did the work. Models walked barefoot with floral crowns, fabrics lifting in the wind. Afro-luxury without restraint.

Dakar Fashion Week ended where the city meets the sea. Twenty-four years in, the event is no longer proving anything—it’s setting terms. The pirogue runway will be the image that travels. But the story is bigger than the staging. Adama Paris used what Dakar already has and made it the format.

Photography: © Alexandre Gandaho

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