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KINDRED SPIRITS QUILT SHOW

🧵✨ We’re at the Kindred Spirits Quilt Show! ✨🧵
“Space and Time: Quilting Afrofuturism”
📍 Durham Convention Center | 🗓 June 20, 2025 | 6–9 PM

Diaspora Creations is proud to be part of this powerful celebration of Black creativity, heritage, and imagination. From bold Ankara prints to vibrant handmade accessories, our table is filled with cultural beauty and ancestral storytelling through fabric.

We’re honored to stand among amazing Black artists and quilters whose works speak of liberation, future visions, and the spirit of community.

đź’¬ Come by, connect, and celebrate quilting as an art form rooted in history and bursting into the future!

KindredSpirits2025 #Afrofuturism #BlackArtMatters #DiasporaCreations #QuiltingCulture #DurhamEvents #BlackCreatives #AfricanFabricLove #HandmadeWithPride

GYE NYAME

The gye nyame symbol is the best known African symbol. It means “except for God” and signifies the all-knowing power of God and his control of all things. If you look closely at the symbol you can see that it shows a person inside of a hand. It is a picture of how we are held in the hand of God.

Another translation of the gye nyame symbol is this: This great panorama of creation dates back to time immemorial; no one lives who saw its beginning and no one will live to see its end, EXCEPT GOD.

HISTORY OF KENTE

Dazzling, colorful textiles from West Africa have inspired fashions popular among Americans of African descent. Although many African have long woven fabrics in diverse styles, clearly “Kente”- handwoven cloth made in long, narrow strips, then cut and sewn together—is the best known and most influential.

Made by the Asante people of Ghana and Togo, Kente is not the traditional name for this cloth in the language of either ethnic group, although it is now commonly used by all Ghanaians and Togolese, as well as other Africans. Kente is a word of unclear origins, but is perhaps a corruption of the Fante word for “basket”, also a product that is woven. The Fante are southern neighbors of the Asante and were, for a long time, the middlemen in trading Kente to non-Africans.

The origins and early history of West African weaving are obscure. Blue and white stripe cloth, not very different from Kente, may well have been produced in sub-Saharan African by the 11th century A.D. This is the radiocarbon date assigned to narrow-band fabrics found in dry caves in the land-locked modern nation of Mali; in the region known as Western Sudan. It is not unlikely that narrow-band weaving technology entered the central zone of West Africa—north of where Kente is now woven—by the 15thcentury.

Shortly after Europeans arrived on the West Coast of African in the late 15th century, in the region that came to be called the Gold Coast—now Ghana—they noticed fine, locally woven cloth.

Cloth trade between Europe and Africa was once one-way, to Africa. European textiles were coveted imports from the earliest days of contact. Some imported fabrics were worn or otherwise used “as it”. But many kinds of cotton, linen, and especially fine silks cloths made in Europe were laboriously unraveled, then rewoven into textiles that more accurately expressed local African artistic preferences, which were clearly well established prior to the early contact period.

Over the several centuries that weavers have been developing and refining Kente cloth, hundreds—perhaps thousands—of types and patterns have been created. And all Kente cloth types, as well as all specific designs used on different cloth have distinct names.

Many of these names are proverbs or refer to proverbs. An abstract cross, interpreted as a body design pattern, for example, refers to the proverb that translates as “Every man carries his own mark”; that is, everyone has a distinct personality. A pattern was introduced in 1960, to commemorate the newly opened hydroelectric dam at Akosombo. As it enabled the electrification of much of Ghana, the new dam was an important contribution to national life. Anthropologist Robert Rattray recorded over 300 pattern-associated proverbs in the 1920s.

Traditionally, only men produce Kente cloth’s narrowband weaves, which are 3 ½ to 4 ¾ inches wide. The men work, seated at horizontal treadle looms, with long warp threads rolled up in front and weighted to provide tension. This type of loom is known in many parts of Africa. Now, it is not uncommon to find women weaving Kente in Ghana.

Until British colonial power became ascendant around 1900, military and political power, as well as wealth and the control of trade, were concentrated in the hands of the Akan royals, among whom the Asante is currently the largest and best known. In pre-colonial times, sumptuary laws governed the use of textiles; persons of lesser rank were forbidden to wear more elaborate, richer cloth than those worn by chiefs. It has been reported that lesser chiefs, who happened to wear more elegant or finer clothes than their superiors, were admonished to change into more subdued apparel. The emphasis on complex royal weaves, which are admittedly the most eye-catching and spectacular, should not overshadow the importance of simple, striped cotton fabrics. Just as the ordinary citizenry among the Asante greatly outnumber royalty, so too, were there always many more common, though often very beautiful, Kente cloths woven and worn in Ghana and Togo.

If the broadcasting of status and rank has long been one specific function of textiles arts in Ghana and Togo, it is far from its only role. For the Ewes, who have not traditionally shared a hierarchical sociopolitical structure with the Asante and other Akan people, the richness and complexity of fabric have been primary indicators of wealth and prestige. When a Ewe could pay for the finest cloth, he or she could then wear it. Certain Ewe clothes were given to bribes, others were worn by mourners, while yet another type celebrated the birth of twins. These specific uses are rarely if ever, observed today. Asante and Ewe weavers produced many of the same types of textiles. The most characteristic Ewe cloth has small representational inlays—a comb, bird, person, stool, lizard—a type of cloth that the Asante never weave.

The subject of strip-woven textiles called Kente is complex. It is not enough to say that they provide splendid garments, or to say that their clothes embody a refined aesthetic sensibility and a remarkable technical achievement. The fabrics also encode and express—or once did—sociopolitical values and cultural meanings that add up to no less than a philosophical system and worldview. The names of cloths and patterns, the situation and role-specific wearing of cloth, the styles and protocol of fabric display, and finally, the interactions with strangers, all of which are embedded in the history of Kente, bespeak an exceptionally rich, meaning tradition.

It is this last point—interaction with strangers—to which we return in considering the contemporary use of Kente and its industrially produced spin-offs. The interaction began around 1500 when European fabrics were unraveled by African craftspeople to be rewoven into styles more suitable to their values. It continues today when Kente is adapted to new situations in America.

Americans of African descent are showing pride in their heritage by working with and wearing Kente or Kente-inspired fabric. Kente is worn during college graduation, all the major Black Greek organizations have color-specific Kente stoles and almost every African-American social organization has their own kente stole.

AFRICAN PROVERBS

Proverbs are an integral part of African culture. Passed on from generation to generation for centuries, they are still in wide use today and are very much part of everyday speech. Proverbs are used to illustrate ideas, reinforce arguments and deliver messages of inspiration, consolation and celebration.

Happy Reading!

  • The eyes do not carry the load but they know what the head can carry
  • A fool and water will go the way they are diverted”
  • The great Nigerian author Chinua Achebe once wrote: “Proverbs are the palm oil with which words are eaten.”
  • When the mouse laughs at the cat there is a hole nearby. Nigeria
  • He who hunts two rats at the same time catches none. Uganda
  • The sky is too big for two birds to clash. Nigeria
  • A person who sells eggs should not start a fight in the market. Zambia
  • The tree that cannot shed its old leaves in the dry season cannot survive the period of drought. Tanzania
  • You cannot shave a man’s head in his absence. Nigeria
  • If you are filled with pride, then you will have no room for wisdom. Juba, South Sudan
  • Every monkey is a gazelle in the eyes of his mother. Northern Africa.
  • If money were to be found up in the trees, most people would be married to monkeys. Cameroon
  • If crocodiles eat their own eggs, what would they do to the flesh of a frog? Nigerian
  • He who does not look ahead always remains behind. YaoundĂ©, Cameroon
  • You may well have two legs but you still can’t climb two trees at the same time. Ethiopian
  • Even if the cock does not crow, the sun will rise. Zimbabwe
  • Those who like to play with dogs are likely to get their clothes torn. Nigeria
  • Advice and counsel him; if he does not listen, let adversity teach him. Ethiopia
  • If while climbing a tree you insist on going beyond the top, the earth will be waiting for you. Kenya
  • A fight between grasshoppers is a joy to the crow. Lesotho.
  • The rain that makes a bitter leaf even bitterer is the same one that sweetens the sugar cane. Sierra Leone.
  • Slowly, but surely, the egg will walk on its legs. Ethiopia.
  • One must row in whichever boat one finds oneself. Nigeria.
  • You should not hire a hyena to protect your goats. Kampala,
  • One person alone does not climb the ladder of death. Ghana.
  • Leading a race does not mean that you will win it. Zambia
  • There’s no bad bush where you can throw away a bad child. Sierra Leone.
  • The breeze that disgraces the chicken always comes from the back. Liberia. The Gambia
  • Do not blame God for creating the tiger. Be thankful he didn’t give him wings. Ethiopian
  • Advice is a stranger; if he is welcome he stays for the night; if not, he leaves the same day. Madagascar
  • When a lizard nods its head, it does not mean that all is well. Ashanti, Ghana
  • One finger alone cannot wash a face. Somalia.
  • That a tiger prowls along quietly does not mean he is timid. Nigeria
  • Smooth seas do not make skilful sailors. Malawi
  • A fish has nothing to do with a raincoat. Sierra Leone.
  • You cannot look through the neck of a bottle with both eyes at the same time. Ghana
  • One head cannot carry a roof. Lilongwe, Malawi
  • Do not expect to be offered a chair when you are visiting a place where the chief sits on the floor. South Africa
  • He who conceals his disease cannot expect to be cured. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
  • A snake will always give birth to something long. Nigeria, Liberia
  • If a frog comes out of the water and tells you that the crocodile is dead, do not doubt it. Ghana
  • The day the monkey is destined to die all the trees get slippery. Kenya
  • The firewood gathered when you are healthy warms you when you are sick. Uganda
  • Every day is for the thief, one day is for the owner. Nigeria
  • Don’t be in a hurry to swallow when chewing is pleasant. Malawi
  • If you are slow but resolute, you accomplish much. Uganda
  • Beware of the naked man who offers you clothes.
  • You will never know the importance of the buttocks until you have a boil on one of them. Ghana
  • Do not beat a drum with an axe. Ghana
  • Only the soil knows that the baby mouse is sick. Zimbabwe
  • When the hyena is the judge, the goat has no rights. Uganda
  • When the bush is on fire, grasshoppers have no time to say good bye to each other. South Sudan
  • One does not tell a deaf person that war has broken out. Igbo, Nigeria.
  • It is better to have an old bride than to sleep in a bachelor’s hut. Zimbabwe
  • A fowl does not forget where it lays its eggs. Ghana
  • If a cockroach wants to rule over the chicken, then it must hire a fox as a body-guard. Nigeria
  • If the tiger sits, do not think it is out of respect. Uganda
  • Don’t set out on a journey using someone else’s donkey. Somalia
  • A baby on its mother’s back does not know the way is long. Nigeria

WAIST BEADS 

Waist beads can be visible as a symbol of femininity, celebration, or aristocracy, or hidden as a way of self-care or confidence or intimate appeal. There are many reasons why waist beads were, and still are, an intricate aspect of African (and now American) culture. 1. A Symbol of Femininity and Sensuality.

Waist beads can be visible as a symbol of femininity, celebration, or aristocracy, or hidden as a way of self-care or confidence or intimate appeal. There are many reasons why waist beads were, and still are, an intricate aspect of African (and now American) culture. 

  1. A Symbol of Femininity and 

Sensuality

Some like to call them “colorful strands of femininity.” They’re handmade strands, usually made by women for women of any and all body types and sizes. Traditional Ghanaian culture wears waist beads to specifically signify femininity (as well as wealth and practical usage such as an anchor for a menstrual cloth). For some women, they would wear their beads under their clothes – which only allowed their love to see them as a meaning of sanctity and purity between the two. For some, the beads are a means of seduction to provoke desire. Sometimes, wives would use the rattling of the beads to communicate their fertility.

  1. Rites of Passage & Symbols of
    Growth

Waist beads were a rite of passage for some cultures. Mothers would ornament their daughters with beads during their first menstruation as a ceremonial rite of passage into womanhood.

Each time new waist beads were inherited, it symbolized a healthy life, growth, and maturity.

  1. Measurements and Body Shaping

Both traditionally and in modern times, women will wear waist beads to get/keep their bodies intact. It is said that the beads shape your body and keep the waist small and hips accentuated. It was (and still is) used as a measurement tool. The beads do not stretch, so if/when the waist beads start to feel a little tight, it’s a sign that there were some weight gain and vice versa.

  1. The Formation of The Beads

In a traditional sense, the person making your waist beads is usually a highly spiritual person. The beads, shells, stones, and other things that may go on your waist are picked and placed with the intention of something or something very specific. The beads a woman wears for her husband will be vastly different from the ones a young girl wears into her transition into womanhood. The trend of waist beads has become very modernized and ornamental, but traditionally, the potency and power of a woman’s beads as it relates to spirituality and development were very specific and intentional.

  1. Colors and Meaning

Speaking of intention, the colors of the beads also have very specific significations. These meanings may vary from tribe to tribe, culture to culture, and they’re open to interpretation, Color is considered powerful and the main factor while choosing beads for most beaded jewelry. Besides the beaded jewelry design and types of beads, the dominant aspect and overall focal point remain to be the color of the beads. Bead’s color is a magical element that symbolizes emotion and connection to events and feelings. For example, when representing new life by the virtue of being pregnant or when trying to conceive, shades of green will signify your desire and the deep connection with new life.
Below are some bead color meanings:

  • Black – Power, and protection
  • Blue – Loyalty and truth
  • Brown – Earth and stability
  • Gold – Good health, power, and wealth
  • Green – Abundance, fertility, nature, and prosperity
  • Orange – Courage, self-confidence, and vitality
  • Pink – Care, beauty, love, and kindness
  • Purple – Royalty, spirituality, and wisdom
  • Red – Confidence, and vitality
  • Turquoise – Communication and self-awareness
  • White – Light, truth, and purity

Yellow – Energy, joy, and happiness

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