Skip to main content

From bedroom to boutique: Handmade fashion with a Rwandan heart


Christine Mbabzi started designing clothes in her bedroom in Rwanda. In March 2014 she made her dream of owning her own store a reality.

When Christine Mbabazi started designing clothes in her bedroom in the Rwandan capital of Kigali, she had big ambitions. Now the owner of her own store -- Christine Creative Collections -- she has even bigger plans: turning her fashion boutique into a household name.
"The brand is promoting African fabric and African designs, with my creativity, and developing it to the rest of the world," says the young entrepreneur.
Launched last March, Mbabazi's startup produces and sells a wide variety of eye-catching fashion items, including bags, shoes and clothes. Mbabazi says Rwanda is at the very heart of her brand, so every creation in her store is handmade with locally-sourced materials.
"I love the African fabric," she says. "[Growing up] I liked looking unique, [so] I used to cut my clothes in different ways -- I used to change them, I used to sew with my hands. It all inspired me to come up with what I have today."
Mbabazi, who is also a radio presenter, makes use of social media to reach new customers, but says she has found it difficult to convince people that traditional fabrics are acceptable in formal settings.
"My friends saw me and saw I was very unique in parties, weddings, even at work -- that's how the word spread out. It's still a big challenge convincing people you can go to work when you have a African fabric suit but we are still fighting those small challenges."
Her next step is to take the brand, which she calls CCC for short, out of Rwanda. "I want to be exporting things made in Rwanda," she says, "so that when you are in Europe and you see something, you're like this is from CCC."

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Which of these business Africans inspires you most and why?

                           Aliko Dangote                                                         Michael Adenuga                                  Isabel Dos Santos                                                       Tony Elumelu                               Nicky Oppenheimer                                                  Siza  Mzimela Folorunsho...

I Turn Down Worldly Deals Worth Millions – DJ Ernesty

Ernest Esekhile is a graduate of Estate Management from Federal University of Technology Minna, Niger State. The estate Surveyor turns profession DJspeaks with CHINENYE ANAEMENA on sundry issues. Your Background? My name is Ernest Esekhile, I am in my 30s, a graduate of Estate Management from Federal University of Technology Minna, Niger State. Am an estate Surveyor by profession but a DJ by calling, I do both Radio and club DJ, gospel DJ and all round DJ. I come from a family of six in Edo State and I have a twin sister. How was growing up like? Growing was really cool especially coming from a family like mine where the children's needs are of utmost priority to our parents, it wasn't so rosy, it was just okay. Your parents and the influence they had on you My parents have influenced me a lot, they are addict followers of Christ who attend Anglican Church, so we had strict adherence to doing things the right way, and that has shaped me into who I...

Joycee Awosika,CEO ,ORIKI:Inspired by Nature, Fueled by Passion

Leaving her job with a Fortune 100 power company was not an easy decision to make but a necessary one to pursue her passion of exploring the Agro-beauty sector. Joycee Awosika is the MD/CEO of ORÍKÌ (a luxury skincare brand that fuses natural ingredients & scientific research to create extraordinary personal care products) and a 2015 Tony Elumelu Entrepreneur recently recognized on the YNaija 100 Most Influential Women. Her first visit to Nigeria in 2011, was the propelling force to starting ORÍKÌ, in her words “I couldn’t help being impacted by the evident abundance of human and natural resources. Nigeria is a colossal gold mine that has been largely untapped and I felt a connection to the potential that could be explored… Beauty manufacturers and corporations around the world exploit the natural ingredients grown abundantly in Nigeria and other African nations yet there are very few proudly indigenous brands that compete globally. A few months after this visit, ...