Tolu Coker (Q9350)

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Tolu Coker is a fashion house from FMD.
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Tolu Coker
Tolu Coker is a fashion house from FMD.

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    At the tail end of one of the busier days of London Fashion Week, walking into Tolu Coker’s show this evening felt like being welcomed home. Walls papered with poppy ’70s graphics were hung with photographs of proud Black women, posing in puff-sleeved dresses and sculptural head wraps, or caught candidly dancing in fine knit vests worn over poplin shorts and pleated plaid skirts. Rather than your typical humdrum chairs, the runway was lined with mid-century furniture and home decorations that gave the room the feeling of a large-scale Michael McMillan installation—teak sofas with deep pile marigold cushions; a fully laid dinner table, decked with bowls laden with tropical fruit; bookcases with shelves lined with hand-carved ebony busts.The intention, the designer explained post-show, was on one level an homage to Olapeju Coker, her dear mother (tributes to mothers being something of a trend this season, following on from Chet Lo on Friday). “In Yoruba, her name meanswealth gathers,” Coker explained. “I really wanted to tap into our culture and how names can carry such significant meaning.” The collection was also an exploration of the significance of living room spaces in the collective psyches of London’s myriad immigrant communities. “I was really looking back at the emotions and feelings I felt growing up in my childhood home, but also in the pictures of living rooms that I would see in my late father, Kayode Coker’s, archives,” the designer said. “They were from the late ’60s and early ’70s, but I felt that sensitivity as a child, and it led me to look deeper into stories of immigration and how the living room has been this sort of gathering space, especially for working-class people. It’s looking at the wealth that exists within these communities.”These notions were poignantly fleshed out in the collection that filed down the runway, a joyfully nostalgic, though still contemporary offering sported by models in sculptural beehives and flippy hairspray-held dos. Tailoring served as a pillar, with elegant leather Harringtons and sporty oversized denim separates showcasing some impressive cutting skills—the jackets of the latter looks were particularly striking, featuring corsetry detailing at the waist and lace-up back, plus intricate, in-built bust constructions.
    Elsewhere, swinging 1960s flair was channeled with gusto by halterneck waistcoats paired with pleated ra-ra skirts, cropped vests, micro-skirts, A-line dresses and even an umbrella printed with warm, lysergic swirls.
    15 September 2024
    With her exuberant sense of top-to-toe polish—high hats, immaculate hair-styling, sharp tailoring, spike-heel Ugg boots—Tolu Coker convened an exciting show at London Fashion week. She set up her stall (an actual market stall at the end of the runway) in celebration of the women road-side hawkers of Accra, Ghana, who she’d seen on holiday recently, and those of West Africa in general. That female power, combined with her spiffy rendition of Church-going, “Sunday Best”-smart leather jackets, pleated skirts, and corseted shirt-dresses swept and enthralled along with her.Talented young Black designers from in and around communities in London are frequently interconnected with the Caribbean—Martine Rose, Grace Wales Bonner, Saul Nash, Bianca Saunders and Nicholas Daley, amongst others. Coker adds her own perspective as a British-Nigerian Londoner, a multi-disciplinary artist, designer, and live-wire brought up in North Kensington. At home, her mom passed on stories about how she’d taken part in the street-hawking culture in Lagos. In her show-notes, Coker describes how her parents would save their “aged” clothes to send to relatives in Africa, where the garments would enter the recycling chain.That memory lies behind her retrieval of late ’60s and ’70s styles, and how she embedded them with West African influences; such as her tailored waistcoats and trousers with volume “akin to Sokoto trousers worn by Yoruba men,” and the side-slits in her long pleated skirts, which nodded to “the breathable nature of conservative kaftans.” In more than a nod to material continuity, Coker noted that she’d also styled pieces from some of her past collections into the show. “Sustainability isn’t one-dimensional. I love to look at clothes that are in the category of ‘waste’ and breathe new life into them,” she stated. “It crosses over with the culture of hawking and recycling.” Her narrative contributes yet more to the profusion of different Black British identities which are strengthening London fashion in the 2020s—she’s telling her with equal parts cogency and joy.
    26 February 2024