The Secret History of African Print Names, Why Is It Called ‘Angelina’ or ‘Michelle Obama’ Anyway

If you have ever walked into a fabric market and heard a seller shout, Aunty come and see this Angelina, very fine on your body, you have probably wondered two things.

One, who exactly is Angelina.

Two, why does every Ankara print seem to be named after somebody who sounds like a celebrity, a dramatic Nollywood character or a prophetess from a 1998 crusade.

Welcome to the delicious world of African print names, a place where fabric meets folklore, where textile patterns have backstories that are sometimes sweet, sometimes scandalous and always entertaining.

Let’s spill the full tea.

Shop Women's


First, Why Do Ankara Prints Even Have Names

African prints have always been more than fabric. In many West African cultures, what you wear can tell a full story without you saying a single word. Colors speak, motifs communicate, and the print you choose can hint at your mood, your status, your love life or who you are subtly shading at the party.

Because print makers needed a way to market designs across different African countries and because buyers needed a way to describe patterns without long explanations, names became the code.

Instead of saying, That blue design with circles that look like eyes but are not really eyes, people simply say, Give me Eye of the Husband or I want Angelina.

Names made sales easier, but over time they became culture. Now the name itself can make a fabric famous.


The Queen of All, The Legendary Angelina

This is the Beyoncé of African prints. The superstar. The generational classic.

The real name of the print is actually Dashiki, produced by Vlisco. The neckline pattern looked like a jeweled collar a queen would wear, so people started calling it Angelina, inspired by a popular Ghanaian Highlife song from the 60s.

The fabric blew up so fast across West Africa that to this day, markets from Lagos to Accra simply refer to anything with that iconic V shaped neckline as Angelina.

If you say you do not know it, your tailor will judge you silently.


The Michelle Obama Print, When Fashion Meets Politics

This one is more recent and it is pure pop culture magic.

During Barack Obama’s 2008 campaign, many African designers began creating prints inspired by the hope and excitement of the era. One particular pattern became famous because women claimed it made them feel elegant, confident and ready to conquer the world.

Somewhere, somehow, somebody said, This one is giving Michelle Obama energy, and the name stuck.

Now the print sells simply because customers want to channel that mix of grace and power. A little political history on your outfit, why not.

Nicki Afro Print Dress High low dress gathered skirt corset waistband self-tie bodice lined lace up back waist zip fastening tulle underskirt, overall length 52" colour patterns may be different due to the photographs lights.


Money Dey Print, Because Africans Love Soft Life

Not every print is named after a person. Some reflect vibes. Energy. Mood. Aspirations.

There are prints popularly called Money Dey, Rich Madam, Plenty Money, and even Owo Nla. These are usually bright, bold patterns that look wealthy. They look like the kind of outfit you wear when rice will definitely be served at the party.

People buy them because fashion is manifestation.


The Eyes Print, Otherwise Known as Keep Quiet I Am Watching You

You have seen this one. A repeating pattern of eye like circles. It exists in so many colors, yet all of them carry the same dramatic nickname.

The name comes from an old proverb about caution. Women used to wear it to subtly send a message like, I saw what you did and I have my eyes on you.

Fashion as communication, we love it.


Kpekere, Fish, and Other Food Inspired Names

Some prints get their names from whatever they resemble.

If the pattern looks like plantain slices, Nigerians will call it Kpekere. If it looks like fish scales, Ghanaians may call it Fanti Fish. If it reminds people of cassava flakes, someone will shout Garri Must Go.

African markets are creative like that. Anything can get a nickname.


Women and Gossip, A Fan Favorite

There is a popular print called Six Women or Women Talking because the motif shows six shapes positioned like people gossiping under a tree.

Women used to buy this fabric when they wanted to send a message that they were not afraid of gossip or when they wanted to hint that they were aware people were talking but they were unbothered.

Basically, the original clapback outfit.


The Real Fun Part, Names Change From Country to Country

What Nigeria calls Angelina, Senegal might call Yaay Boy.
What Ghana calls Nsu Bura meaning water well, Togo might call Cauri meaning shell.

The same fabric can have ten different names, all depending on cultural interpretation. That is what makes African print history so rich. It is a shared language with many accents.


So Why Do These Names Matter

Because they tell us that African fashion is alive.
Because every print carries a story, a memory, a joke or a slice of real history.
Because names turn fabric into identity, and identity into pride.

When you wear a print with a name, you are wearing a piece of culture and contributing to a legacy that has survived colonization, globalization and fast fashion trends.


Final Tea, The Names Will Keep Evolving

Today it is Angelina and Michelle Obama.
Tomorrow it might be Tems Blue, Burna Boy Sunrise or Soft Life Chronicles.

Because African fashion never stops reinventing itself.
And every new generation adds their own gist.

Comments

0 Comments Add comment

Leave a comment