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theorispresent

The Or Foundation

Too Much Clothing. Not Enough Justice.
Support Kantamanto Fire Relief ⬇️

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Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago


Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago


Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago


Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

Welcome to May, our friends on the internet side. We started the month with a cleanup (Tuesday, 06 May), and another reminder of how much people are wiling to give when they show up for care for the community.

In just over 90mins, 198 people (65 ICs and 133 volunteers) removed and cleared 30,429kg of textile waste and other forms of waste from the Jamestown coastline.

Everyone moving, together, carrying, sorting, lifting, bagging, and stepping in where they were resourceful.

It’s a lot of burden, but somehow people still show up fully — that’s ACCOUNTABILITY! And that part never leaves us.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


131
2
4 days ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago


From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

From Kantamanto to Lagos Fashion Week, Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, we showed not just a presentation, but a collective, shaped through material, process, and people.

What begins in Kantamanto, where many second-hand garments and materials are discarded, continues in the hands of a growing community of designers and practitioners who rework them into identity, memory, labour, resistance, and possibility. From reclaimed textiles to weaving, dyeing, crocheting, and material experimentation, each practice offers a different way of engaging with what already exists, not as waste, but as a resource.

At this year’s presentation, we brought together designers and makers working across upcycling, circular design, and craft, carrying their practices from the market, through our studio, and onto the Woven Threads stage, grounded in the daily labour, skill, and knowledge of the Kantamanto community and its network of craftsmen, tailors, and seamstresses, who continue to explore new ways of making through reclaimed materials.

Nakoi - Rebecca Korkor Mensah @__nakoi__, Daily Dosage - Emmanuel Tetteh @_dailydsg_, Mabilgu (The Or Foundation) @mabilgu, Emie Atelier - Apladey Theresah Emefah @emie.atelier, Morhands - Rabi Kudomor @mor_hands, Damtse - Glady Damtse @damstewear, Humble - Harris Kharin Bennah, Martinson Klothing - Martinson Afari @martinsonklothing, Master Hanga - Samuel Gyasi @linsam.garment
StreetNotSafe - Joshua Baah @streetnotsafe_, KOMA ARC - Derrick Asare @koma_arc, Apprica’s Toggery - Erica Appiah Amankwah @apprica_toggery, A Bite of Memory - Glory Adom Unique @glory_adom_unique, House Of D Smith - Merilyn Smoth Dodzi Gladys @houseofdsmith, and Winneba Waivers - Project Justine @theprojectjustine

This was a collective practice. A different way of making. A different way of seeing. A different way of valuing. Because textile transformation does not begin with the garment. It begins with people.

Thank you @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat.

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


272
26
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

At Woven Threads VII: CRAFTED, it was clear that Sustainability is not a trend, and it cannot exist in isolation. It lives across systems, in how we produce, consume, discard, source, remake, move, and value.

Within this shared installation space, the works by NAKOI unfolded as garments of memory and becoming - pieces that draw on identity, womanhood, and heritage, shaped through reclaimed materials and careful hand processes.

Alongside this, woven works developed in collaboration with the Winneba Weavers through Project Justine brought another layer of material knowledge into the space, grounding the exhibition in practices that have long understood care, continuity, and craft.

Kantamanto and other African secondhand markets are not an abstract site of waste. They are a living system of people, labour, skills, talents, creativity and care - constantly working to extend the life of garments within a global system that was never designed to hold them.

Presenting this work in Lagos, alongside designers and cultural practitioners rethinking material, process, and value, was to be part of a larger alignment. A shared insistence that fashion can move differently, and we already have the solutions we need.

Not extractive. Not disposable. But rooted. Circular. Regenerative. And accountable to the people within it.

Thank you to @lagosfashionweekofficial, @stylehousefiles and @sunnydolat for creating such a space for this work to be seen, engaged with, and held in conversation.

And to our team, our Executive Co-founders and community, who were on the ground: Eugene Ewusi-Annan, Sammy Oteng, Liz Ricketts, Branson Skinner, Rebecca Naa-Koi and Emmanauel Tetteh, for carrying this work into the space with intention.

Photos by Style House Files & Lagos Fashion Week

#Kantamanto #CircularFashion #TheOrFoundation #LFW


218
8
1 weeks ago

Two stories. Two shades. One second life.
Crafted from discarded textiles, reimagined into wearable art where muted greys meet washed blues in layered harmony.

The darker tones explore depth, strength, and quiet elegance through layered shades of grey, while the lighter blues carry softness, calmness, and movement. Together, they reflect the beauty of contrast and the idea that even what is abandoned can be transformed into something timeless.

At SYSO, every piece is more than clothing it is proof that sustainability and craftsmanship can exist in the same space beautifully.


1.3K
24
1 weeks ago

Two stories. Two shades. One second life.
Crafted from discarded textiles, reimagined into wearable art where muted greys meet washed blues in layered harmony.

The darker tones explore depth, strength, and quiet elegance through layered shades of grey, while the lighter blues carry softness, calmness, and movement. Together, they reflect the beauty of contrast and the idea that even what is abandoned can be transformed into something timeless.

At SYSO, every piece is more than clothing it is proof that sustainability and craftsmanship can exist in the same space beautifully.


1.3K
24
1 weeks ago

Two stories. Two shades. One second life.
Crafted from discarded textiles, reimagined into wearable art where muted greys meet washed blues in layered harmony.

The darker tones explore depth, strength, and quiet elegance through layered shades of grey, while the lighter blues carry softness, calmness, and movement. Together, they reflect the beauty of contrast and the idea that even what is abandoned can be transformed into something timeless.

At SYSO, every piece is more than clothing it is proof that sustainability and craftsmanship can exist in the same space beautifully.


1.3K
24
1 weeks ago

Two stories. Two shades. One second life.
Crafted from discarded textiles, reimagined into wearable art where muted greys meet washed blues in layered harmony.

The darker tones explore depth, strength, and quiet elegance through layered shades of grey, while the lighter blues carry softness, calmness, and movement. Together, they reflect the beauty of contrast and the idea that even what is abandoned can be transformed into something timeless.

At SYSO, every piece is more than clothing it is proof that sustainability and craftsmanship can exist in the same space beautifully.


1.3K
24
1 weeks ago

Two stories. Two shades. One second life.
Crafted from discarded textiles, reimagined into wearable art where muted greys meet washed blues in layered harmony.

The darker tones explore depth, strength, and quiet elegance through layered shades of grey, while the lighter blues carry softness, calmness, and movement. Together, they reflect the beauty of contrast and the idea that even what is abandoned can be transformed into something timeless.

At SYSO, every piece is more than clothing it is proof that sustainability and craftsmanship can exist in the same space beautifully.


1.3K
24
1 weeks ago

Two stories. Two shades. One second life.
Crafted from discarded textiles, reimagined into wearable art where muted greys meet washed blues in layered harmony.

The darker tones explore depth, strength, and quiet elegance through layered shades of grey, while the lighter blues carry softness, calmness, and movement. Together, they reflect the beauty of contrast and the idea that even what is abandoned can be transformed into something timeless.

At SYSO, every piece is more than clothing it is proof that sustainability and craftsmanship can exist in the same space beautifully.


1.3K
24
1 weeks ago

We’re delighted to welcome @theorispresent to @mcrmuseumshop 💚

The Or Foundation epitomises style with purpose ✨. Based in Ghana, they strive to shift the fashion industry from the fast fashion cycle toward a more sustainable business model ♻️. They champion and support local artisans who create upcycled clothing and accessories, made from the estimated 15 million secondhand garments that arrive in Kantamanto Market in Ghana every week from the global north.

Complementing the Human Natures exhibition @mcrmuseum, this collection of vibrant tote bags has a nod to the Kantamanto Market on the outside, and the inside of each bag is just as interesting, as you will find the collars, pockets and other features of the discarded shirts that they are made from 🙌.

This collection, that is truly unique and the antithesis to throwaway fashion, is available in our Museum shop.

#ManchesterMuseumShop #museumshop #museumexclusives #exhibitiongifts #exhibitionexclusives #exhibitionproducts #ManchesterMuseumExhibitions


90
1
1 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

Last Saturday, 25th April was different!

Sis Deborah brought her energy and brought all her people. And everything met in one place:the work, the energy, the food, the music, the people, and all the moments at Kinshasha Beach, Jamestown.

We were originally meant to start at 2pm exactly but the tide didn’t agree. Still, the ICs of Tide Turners stepped into the sea water. Pulling all kinds of waste from the sea, bringing it back to shore, passing it on so it could be collected, sorted, bagged and carried up to the truck upstairs.

That kind of coordination…you don’t plan it perfectly. You feel and act upon it, immediately.

And it carried us through the entire day. From the cleanup, to the coconut refreshment and to the scrumptious Ga kenkey meal, to setting up the stage, to the live band later, everything held together because our community showed up, stayed through and cared enough to be present fully.

And in just over 2 hours with 315 people on ground, we removed 31,349kg of textile and other kinds of waste from the beach shore.

But honestly, it’s wasn’t even just about the numbers. It was the physical efforts, the strength and the way everyone moved together.

That’s what made the day what it was.

Thank you to @sisterdeborah (@wanlov, @pappykojo and @yeboyah) for standing with our work, for showing up, for using your voice and medium to amplify what truly matters for the future of our environment and water bodies, and all the team at @theorispresent for working tirelessly to bring people close to it and pulling this off.

And for everyone who came through, we felt your presence and efforts, thank you so much for being part of this cleanup.

We move; unto the next.

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


602
19
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

For the third year in a row, we returned to The Street Academyto mark Earth Month alongside Naa Korle and our proud Planeteers.

This time, with the support of Tide Turners, we went deeper - introducing and honoring her mother, Nshɔɔrna, the great ocean, and reflecting on the many ways we are called to care for her.

In communities like these, on the frontlines of a global textile waste crisis they did not create - the urgency is not abstract as the skate is very clear. It is lived, daily.

Here, “Our Power, Our Planet” is more than just a theme. It is a reminder that transformation is a collective effort and real change happens through community choices each one of us have to make.

Happy Earth Month!


157
6
2 weeks ago

355
14
2 weeks ago

Unmatched Tide Turners energy!

#BeachCleanup #OceanProtection #ClimateAction


130
3
2 weeks ago

But regardless, we’ve started. And here we go again with Sister Deborah!


212
4
2 weeks ago

Every single week, 15 million garments arrive at Kantamanto Market in Accra, castoffs from the Global North. Nearly 40% of them end up as waste, washing into our lagoons, burying our beaches, ending up in the bellies of our fish. Each week, The OR Foundation and their @tideturnerscleanup team haul more than 30 tonnes of this waste off Accra’s coastline.

But they are not only cleaning. For over a decade, they have stood alongside the Kantamanto community. Rebuilding after the devastating January fire. Funding emergency relief, healthcare, and debt support. Creating alternative livelihoods for the kayayei, the young women who carry 55kg bales on their heads for less than a dollar a trip. Installing fire extinguishers, electrifying stalls, training women-led security teams. And pushing for global policy change so that the brands producing all of this waste are finally held accountable for what they leave behind.

They call it a justice-led circular economy. We call it love in action.
To our team, thank you for showing up with open hearts and willing hands. To @theorispresent - thank you for the lesson, and for the generosity of letting us learn alongside you. Thank you for doing this work, day after day, year after year.

Ghana’s coastline. Ghana’s people. Ghana’s dignity. This is the work.
#GhanaToTheWorld #TheORFoundation #TideTurners #StopWasteColonialism #kantamanto


3
15
2 weeks ago

This Earth Month, we centre women’s voices. Kantamanto Women show us environmental stewardship in extending the lives of our clothes. Every week, 15 million garments arrive in Kantamanto Market, and these women handle the clothes with care - ensuring that they are reused to the best of their skills and creativity; often without funding support from global fashion cooperations and mega industries as the cycle of overproduction and overconsumption continues.

Kantamanto Women extend our connection to clothes, showing us that only through collaboration can we then grow, through a shared responsibility.

Let’s celebrate the critical hands of women who show love to our clothes through resale, repair and upcycling.

#WomenOfKantamanto #EarthDay #Restoration


117
7
2 weeks ago


View Instagram Stories in Secret

The Instagram Story Viewer is an easy tool that lets you secretly watch and save Instagram stories, videos, photos, or IGTV. With this service, you can download content and enjoy it offline whenever you like. If you find something interesting on Instagram that you’d like to check out later or want to view stories while staying anonymous, our Viewer is perfect for you. Anonstories offers an excellent solution for keeping your identity hidden. Instagram first launched the Stories feature in August 2023, which was quickly adopted by other platforms due to its engaging, time-sensitive format. Stories let users share quick updates, whether photos, videos, or selfies, enhanced with text, emojis, or filters, and are visible for only 24 hours. This limited time frame creates high engagement compared to regular posts. In today’s world, Stories are one of the most popular ways to connect and communicate on social media. However, when you view a Story, the creator can see your name in their viewer list, which may be a privacy concern. What if you wish to browse Stories without being noticed? Here’s where Anonstories becomes useful. It allows you to watch public Instagram content without revealing your identity. Simply enter the username of the profile you’re curious about, and the tool will display their latest Stories. Features of Anonstories Viewer: - Anonymous Browsing: Watch Stories without showing up on the viewer list. - No Account Needed: View public content without signing up for an Instagram account. - Content Download: Save any Stories content directly to your device for offline use. - View Highlights: Access Instagram Highlights, even beyond the 24-hour window. - Repost Monitoring: Track the reposts or engagement levels on Stories for personal profiles. Limitations: - This tool works only with public accounts; private accounts remain inaccessible. Benefits: - Privacy-Friendly: Watch any Instagram content without being noticed. - Simple and Easy: No app installation or registration required. - Exclusive Tools: Download and manage content in ways Instagram doesn’t offer.

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View profiles and photos anonymously with ease using the Private Profile Viewer.


Story Viewer for Free

This free tool allows you to view Instagram Stories anonymously, ensuring your activity remains hidden from the story uploader.

Frequently asked questions

 
Anonymity

Anonstories lets users view Instagram stories without alerting the creator.

 
Device Compatibility

Works seamlessly on iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, and modern browsers like Chrome and Safari.

 
Safety and Privacy

Prioritizes secure, anonymous browsing without requiring login credentials.

 
No Registration

Users can view public stories by simply entering a username—no account needed.

 
Supported Formats

Downloads photos (JPEG) and videos (MP4) with ease.

 
Cost

The service is free to use.

 
Private Accounts

Content from private accounts can only be accessed by followers.

 
File Usage

Files are for personal or educational use only and must comply with copyright rules.

 
How It Works

Enter a public username to view or download stories. The service generates direct links for saving content locally.