
2010s · 2020s · South African
Production
one-of-a-kind
Material
metallic leather
Culture
South African
Movement
Afrofuturism · Gorpcore
Influences
1970s bell-bottom trousers · Victorian top hat
A futuristic three-piece ensemble featuring a fitted jacket with wide lapels and wrap-style closure, matching flared trousers with extreme bell-bottom silhouette, and a coordinating top hat. The metallic leather exhibits an iridescent quality that shifts between purple and silver tones. The jacket has structured shoulders and a defined waist with a belt or tie closure. The trousers begin fitted through the hips and thighs before dramatically flaring from the knee to create an exaggerated bell-bottom shape reminiscent of 1970s silhouettes but executed in contemporary materials. The ensemble demonstrates a blend of historical tailoring techniques with modern synthetic materials and avant-garde proportions.


The skull cap's constellation of metal studs and the jumpsuit's liquid-mercury sheen both channel the same Afrofuturistic impulse to armor the Black body in otherworldly materials. Fifty years separate these pieces, but they share DNA in how they use reflective, synthetic surfaces to project power and possibility—the cap's deliberate punctures creating a protective crown, the jumpsuit's full-body iridescence suggesting a being who has transcended earthly limitations.

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The cape's theatrical sweep and the jumpsuit's space-age silhouette are separated by decades but united by the same Afrofuturistic impulse to transform purple leather into armor for cultural warriors. Both pieces wield metallic accents like talismans—the cape's gold studs echoing ancient regalia, the jumpsuit's iridescent surface catching light like a beetle's shell—turning everyday leather craft into something that could outfit a sci-fi priesthood.
The skull cap's constellation of metal studs and the jumpsuit's liquid-mercury sheen both channel the same Afrofuturistic impulse to armor the Black body in otherworldly materials. Fifty years separate these pieces, but they share DNA in how they use reflective, synthetic surfaces to project power and possibility—the cap's deliberate punctures creating a protective crown, the jumpsuit's full-body iridescence suggesting a being who has transcended earthly limitations.
That dark navy worker's uniform and this shimmering purple leather ensemble share the same fundamental geometry: a structured jacket paired with matching trousers, creating a head-to-toe monochrome statement. The Chinese utility suit's austere functionality finds its glamorous descendant in the South African designer's metallic flares and fitted jacket, both treating the matching set as a form of armor—one for labor, one for the spotlight.

That dark navy worker's uniform and this shimmering purple leather ensemble share the same fundamental geometry: a structured jacket paired with matching trousers, creating a head-to-toe monochrome statement. The Chinese utility suit's austere functionality finds its glamorous descendant in the South African designer's metallic flares and fitted jacket, both treating the matching set as a form of armor—one for labor, one for the spotlight.