Clothes Minded is a podcast about decoding the language of fashion through the African lens. Host, Khensani Mohlatlole, a South African writer, sustainable fash...
Crimes of Fashion: Free Black Women in 18th Century Cape Town
Imagine looking so good that it becomes illegal. Despite the excess of wealth, glamour and spectacle available to the settler elite in 18th century Cape Town, their biggest sartorial competition came from the 118 emancipated women of colour in the Dutch Cape Colony. In 1765, sumptuary laws were introduced, prohibiting these women from coloured silks, fine laces, adorned bonnets and even fake jewellery so that they could not visually appear equal to (or, more honestly, better than) their European counterparts. Khensani delves into the fashion policing of free women of colour in 18th century Cape Town.
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Business enquiries, love letters and cat memes: [email protected]
Host, researcher & writer: Khensani Mohlatlole
Producer: Bongani Maseko for The Hyve AV
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12:31
Embroidery in Apartheid
Beauty can be a knife and beauty can be a shield. In this episode, we explore the history of embroidery from Palestine to South Africa and their shared threads in documenting and resisting apartheid, uncovering the role of needlecraft in fashioning identity and healing communities. Khensani is joined by Lina Barkawi, a practitioner of traditional Palestinian embroidery (tatreez) who uses this craft to connect with heritage and educate others; Dr. Puleng Segalo, a South African psychologist who helps Black women express their trauma through embroidery; and Iman Ganijee an advocate linking African and Middle Eastern textile practices to raise awareness and support for various causes from Congo to Sudan, South Africa and Palestine.
Guests (in order of appearance):
Lina Barkawi (https://www.instagram.com/linasthobe/)
Iman Ganijee (https://www.instagram.com/imanii_g/)
Dr Puleng Segalo (https://www.linkedin.com/in/puleng-segalo-987665240/?originalSubdomain=za)
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Follow Khensani on Instagram @okbaddiek (https://www.instagram.com/okbaddiek) or subscribe to her newsletter, Hanger Management (https://khensani.substack.com) for visual references, weekly updates and insights.
Business enquiries, love letters and cat memes: [email protected]
If you'd like to financially support the show, make a donation of any amount here (https://buymeacoffee.com/khensani/c/8138967?uid=2122045)
Host, writer & editor: Khensani Mohlatlole
Producer: Bongani Maseko for The Hyve AV
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58:16
Africa has no Fashion.
Welcome to Clothes Minded, a show about African history, identity and meaning told through the language of fashion. As the Ghanaian artist, El Anatsui put it: “Cloth is to Africans what monuments are to Westerners.” Join Khensani Mohlatlole as she begins a quest to uncover the cathedrals for those with eyes to see woven into the literal fabric of our lives.
Follow Khensani on Instagram @okbaddiek (https://www.instagram.com/okbaddiek) or subscribe to her newsletter, Hanger Management (https://khensani.substack.com), for weekly updates and insights.
If you'd like to support the show, make a donation of any amount at https://www.buymeacoffee.com/khensani
Writer & Copy Editor: Khensani Mohlatlole
Producer: Bongani Maseko for The Hyve AV.
Clothes Minded is a podcast about decoding the language of fashion through the African lens. Host, Khensani Mohlatlole, a South African writer, sustainable fashion advocate and designer, explores the layers of history, culture, identity and politics woven into our wardrobes with insights from African designers, artisans, academics and industry insiders.