
Soweto Fashion Week cultivates next wave of trailblazers with autumn/winter 2025 showcase
The Soweto Fashion Week autumn/winter showcase is expected to showcase 30-35 designers and with 80 models anticipated to walk the runway. Picture: Supplied
The importance of grassroots and development is often mentioned in sport. Yet development is vital in most, if not all, industries.
In fashion, for someone to reach the level of gracing platforms such as the Met Gala or the Paris Fashion Week, one has to start somewhere.
Now in its 14th edition, the Soweto Fashion Week (SFW) is one of the vital platforms for the development of the fashion industry, particularly because it's hosted in a township, making it accessible.
SFW founder Steph Manzini said their focus on building the local fashion industry differentiates it from other fashion weeks in the country.
'Building the local fashion industry, working with higher institutions at the grassroots level. It's important to keep our local brands relevant in the market,' Manzini told The Citizen.
The SFW's autumn/winter 2025 showcase starts at the Soweto Theatre on Wednesday, 7 May, and will run until Saturday, 10 May.
ALSO READ: 'We haven't even scratched the surface' – Soweto Fashion Week founder on 13 years of consistency [VIDEO]
Autumn/winter showcase
Established in 2011, the SFW has assisted more than 120 designers and 1000 runway models on the African continent, catapulting their businesses and support for 13 years.
For this autumn/winter showcase, Manzini said they are scheduled to showcase 30-35 designers, and 80 models are anticipated to walk the runway.
'Each season, Soweto Fashion Week strives to provide a vital platform for local designers to showcase their talent and connect with a broader audience.
We are committed to fostering growth within the South African fashion industry. Every year, we look forward to presenting collections that are both inspiring and forward-thinking,' Manzini said.
The autumn/winter 2025 collections are expected to blend contemporary styles with traditional influences, highlighting the unique spirit and creativity synonymous with Soweto.
ALSO READ: WATCH: Russian designers captivate audience at the Soweto Fashion Week
'The show goes on'
Speaking to The Citizen just hours before day one of the SFW, Manzini said the preparations were stressful yet fun.
This year's edition sees new sponsors partner with the SFW, which was previously known as the 'Sta-Sof-Fro SFW'—this was as recently as November last year, when the SFW hosted the Spring/Summer showcase.
'Different setup and new sponsors. The conversations are different, hence stress levels go a bit higher but it's fun and worth it,' shared Manzini.
New partners of the SFW are haircare brand Creme of Nature and whisky brand Monkey Shoulder.
'We've had a change of sponsors. At times, sponsorships have a short span, a collaboration that was fitting at the time; however, the show goes on,' Manzini said.
NOW READ: South Africans make their presence felt at the Met Gala in New York
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

IOL News
18 minutes ago
- IOL News
Pearl Thusi, Happy Simelane, Penny Lebyane share to share their encounters on Netflix's 'Beauty and the Bester'
Actress, presenter and businesswoman Pearl Thusi is one of the South African figures who feature in Netflix's new true crime limited documentary series, "Beauty And The Bester". Image: Supplied Netflix has released the trailer for a new true crime limited documentary series, 'Beauty And The Bester'. The limited series chronicles the dramatic rise and fall of Dr. Nandipha Magudumana, a celebrated celebrity doctor whose involvement with convicted rapist and murderer Thabo Bester sent shockwaves across the nation. Friends and family open up in exclusive interviews, each trying to make sense of the strange and unsettling bond between a respected doctor and her convicted criminal partner, Bester. The trailer shows: actress, DJ, presenter and businesswoman Pearl Thusi, 'The Mommy Club' reality TV star and businesswoman Happy Simelane and broadcaster and multi-hyphenate personality Penny Lebyane. Penny Lebyane, a South African media personality, was among several local celebrities who visited Magudumana's Sandton-based beauty business Optimum Medical Aesthetics Solutions. Image: Supplied/Netflix Lebyane, a South African media personality, was among several local celebrities who unknowingly visited the practice of the criminally-accused skin doctor. She has previously been featured on Showmax's "Tracking Thabo Bester. Magudumana was the owner of Optimum Medical Aesthetics Solutions, a Sandton-based beauty business. Model and TV personality Thusi had an encounter with Bester, the 'Facebook Rapist,' in June 2011 and almost became one of his victims. Simelane previously shared her experience meeting the criminal and claimed she was almost trafficked by him. On Showmax's 'The Mommy Club', Simelane showed videos of their meeting where Bester asked her to 'find people producing luxury content'. Happy Simelane previously shared her experience meeting the criminal and claimed she was almost trafficked by him. Image: Supplied/Netflix Once revered as a successful businesswoman and social media influencer with a seemingly perfect life, Magudumana's meticulously crafted image began to crumble amidst suspicions of her role in Bester's elaborate prison escape and his clandestine double life. The three-part series delves into the events of late 2023 that captivated South Africa, leaving the public to ponder: how did one of the country's most admired women become embroiled in one of its most significant criminal scandals? From staged celebrity conferences and lavish living to the shocking escape of Thabo Bester from Mangaung Maximum Security Prison, it all began to unravel with one viral photo of the pair casually shopping at Sandton City, sparking a nationwide manhunt that ended with their dramatic arrest in Tanzania and extradition back to South Africa in handcuffs. Disgraced celebrated celebrity doctor Dr. Nandipha Magudumana's father Zolile Sekeleni features on the documentary. Image: Supplied/Netflix 'Beauty And The Bester' features courtroom footage and never-before-seen investigative material that peels back the layers of a story where love, manipulation, and corruption collide, culminating in a jaw-dropping incident that stunned the world. The individuals include Marecia Damons, one of the journalists who broke the story and Magudumana's father Zolile Sekeleni. 'Beauty and the Bester' launches on Netflix on September, 12, 2025.


eNCA
an hour ago
- eNCA
When motherly love awakens a sleeping monster
JOHANNESBURG - Nothing, and no one fights tooth and nail like a mother on a mission to save her children. Jessica finds herself having to do just that when her daughter Nikki is kidnapped by an old enemy she thought was long dead. READ | WATCH | Grade 1 teacher's body safety song goes viral And it all unfolds in a new South African production, Hunting Jessica Brok. Director Alastair Orr and lead actress Danica De La Rey Jones joined eNCA to speak more on this .

The Star
2 hours ago
- The Star
Investing in local skills is the heart of conservation and filmmaking in Africa
As we reflect on International Youth Day the question around access to opportunity for young people remains a pressing one. Our mission, as Nature, Environment and Wildlife Filmmakers (NEWF), strikes a chord with this theme in that we know that high level skill is required of young people, before meaningful access to opportunity is afforded to them. We find ourselves at a key, yet often-overlooked intersection of potential, the fusion of conservation and filmmaking, and the urgent need to invest in local skills to steward both. In other words, our problem is two-fold: we need to tell conservation stories, and we need to tell them in a local and contextually relevant voice. Too often, stories about African wildlife, environmental change, and indigenous knowledge are captured through lenses far removed from the communities and landscapes they portray. For decades, international narratives about Africa's biodiversity have dominated global platforms, despite being filmed on African soil and shaped by African realities. It's time to shift that paradigm by equipping African storytellers with the tools, mentorship, and platforms to tell their own stories. This is the ethos behind the NEWF movement, a thriving ecosystem of emerging African conservation storytellers. At the heart of our approach is a radical and necessary idea: the people closest to the land, the sea, and the cultural memory of place are the most qualified to tell its stories. Earlier this year, we saw the 8th NEWF Fellows Summit and Congress take place in Durban. The Congress, themed 'Africa Refocused, Reimagined, and Rising Together,' became a living testament to what's possible when you build skills, nurture talent, and foster community. More than 130 fellows came together, not only to hone their craft and pitch their films but to share knowledge, interrogate their identities, and most importantly, to build each other up. Local skills development in the conservation and filmmaking space is not merely an economic investment. It's a political act, striving to make a shift. In a global system that often rewards outside expertise over local experience, empowering African storytellers to lead narrative change is a form of resistance. It reclaims agency, honours ancestral knowledge, and gives voice to environmental issues from those living within them, not observing from afar. The ripple effect of such development is profound. When a Mozambican cinematographer like Carlos Noronha shares the screen with filmmakers from India and Ghana, or when a Kenyan composer like Labdi Ommes scores a film about rhino conservation in South Africa, we're not just telling better stories, we're building a collaborative future for the natural history filmmaking industry. What makes this model so effective is its ecosystem-based approach. Training isn't a one-off workshop or a handout. It's a sustained relationship built on mentorship, peer learning, and emotional as well as technical growth. Whether it's through pitching clinics, creative development labs, or cultural storytelling sessions led by icons like Dr. Gcina Mhlope, the NEWF model creates a space where confidence, purpose, and community intersect. And this is precisely what Youth Month should be about: spotlighting and supporting young Africans who are not waiting for permission to lead. They are visionaries, camera in hand, standing on ancestral ground, capturing what the world so desperately needs to see, through their eyes, in their voices. As climate change, biodiversity loss, and socio-ecological challenges deepen across the continent, it is critical that conservation efforts are not separated from cultural context. Filmmakers are not just documenting wildlife, they are influencing global understanding, policymaking, and funding priorities. The authenticity and ethical clarity of those stories matter. That is why local skills development must become core policy, not a side project, across conservation, media, and creative industries. Investment must follow talent, not convenience. Barriers like access to equipment, training, and global networks must be broken down, not reinforced. Africa has storytellers. Africa has scientists. Africa has the land, the sea, the history, and the future. What's needed now is for institutions, partners, funders, broadcasters, and governments to believe in what's already growing, and to scale it. Because ultimately, the survival of our environment, our heritage, and our people depends on how we tell the story, and who gets to tell it. Noel Kok is the co-founder and executive director of NEWF.