Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Volunteering : Cocoa catwalk: sweet sacks for designer






10 July 2008 - Cocoa runs in the family of Ivorian fashion designer Felicite Mai.It was her father, a tailor-turned-cocoa planter, who gave her her first sewing machine, a model dating back to 1952.
This sewing-school graduate has been turning out eye-catching outfits made from the jute sacks used to ship Ivory Coast''s top export - cocoa.
From her humble shop in the popular Treichville suburb of the economic capital Abidjan, Mai designs, cuts and fits clothes for men and women that use the natural beige colours and coarse fibre of cocoa and coffee sacks.
Normally stuffed to bursting with the cocoa beans that make Ivory Coast the world''s No. 1 grower of the source of chocolate, Mai''s creations are worn by a growing clientele of celebrities, artists and musicians, some even from abroad.
"Ivory Coast''s economy is based on agriculture, especially cocoa and coffee. So I decided to promote these crops by creating these fashion designs," said Mai, whose real name is Maimouna Camara Gomet.
"For me, it''s a way of drawing the whole world''s attention to cocoa and coffee," she said.
Proud to wear her own designs, she sports a beige cut-off top with a frayed fringe, made from a jute sack, over blue jeans, a tape measure draped around her neck.
Her creations -- for both men and women -- include skirts, tops, trousers, shirts, waistcoats as well as caps, bags and accessories, mostly in the natural beige of the washed jute sackcloth, but sometimes also dyed darker brown or blue.
"PRODUCT OF IVORY COAST"
Her models say the "sack clothes" look good with traditional jewellery and ornaments, such as the cowrie shells that were the common currency of the West African coast during past centuries of the Atlantic slave trade.
Mai buys the sacks -- some stamped with the words "Product of Ivory Coast, Cocoa" -- from warehouses at Abidjan''s bustling port. The jute material is washed and cut at her Treichville workshop, where a wax mannequin is used to help with fittings.
"I had this idea from when I was still at sewing school in 1987. Then I opened my own workshop in 1996 and I first launched these kind of designs in 2003 during a fashion contest at Divo (in the south of Ivory Coast)" said Mai, who has several assistants at her shop.
"My father was a tailor and he made jackets for the colonial settlers," she said, referring to Ivory Coast''s former French colonial masters.
"Then he became a coffee and cocoa planter," she added.
Mai hopes that her sack fashion designs can serve as an attractive, enduring advertisement for her country''s best known products -- cocoa and coffee.
"That was the livelihood of our parents," she said.

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