Fashion
AYANA’s “Sunday Best” and the Intimacy of Memory and Motherhood
AYANA’s Sunday Best is a visual exploration of memory and motherhood, capturing the small moments that shape daily life. The project focuses on the routines, gestures, and interactions within families, particularly highlighting the role of mothers in guiding, caring for, and influencing their children.

Photo Credit – Niquita Bento
Creative Director Bee Diamondhead and photographer Niquita Bento worked together to create imagery that emphasizes real-life moments rather than staged fashion. The photos show mothers helping their children into Sunday outfits, adjusting collars, and preparing them for the day. Siblings assist each other, and laughter and movement fill the frames, creating scenes that feel familiar and grounded in everyday life.

Photo Credit – Niquita Bento
Clothing plays a central role in the project, not as a statement of fashion alone but as a reflection of memory and identity. The outfits, carefully chosen Sunday attire, mark milestones, family rituals, and shared experiences. Each piece highlights the balance between functionality and presence, showing how clothing can carry personal and cultural significance beyond aesthetics.

Photo Credit – Niquita Bento
Sunday Best takes place in ordinary environments such as living rooms, front porches, and neighborhood streets rather than formal sets or studios. This choice reinforces the authenticity of the moments captured and underscores the connection between clothing, memory, and daily life. The images illustrate how routine actions, small gestures, and family interactions contribute to lasting memories.
Although the project is rooted in South African experiences, its themes resonate more broadly. Mothers worldwide influence their children through daily care, storytelling, and guidance. By focusing on these universal practices, Sunday Best highlights the importance of mothers in shaping both family and cultural identity.

Photo Credit – Niquita Bento
This project is part of AYANA’s ongoing effort to document lived experiences in a straightforward and authentic way. Rather than prioritizing spectacle or abstract concepts, Sunday Best emphasizes the meaningful details of everyday life. The work reminds audiences that memory and maternal care are intertwined, and that the simple actions of mothers often have the most lasting impact.
Fashion
Tyla Wears Peacock-Inspired Custom Valentino at the 2026 Met Gala
South African star Tyla arrived at the 2026 Met Gala in a custom Valentino creation designed by Alessandro Michele. While many guests chose a more expressive styling direction for the night, her look prioritised texture, structure and fluid motion in the fabric.
The design paired a peacock-blue satin skirt with a thigh-high slit and a long trailing hem. The bodice carried crystal chains, silver beadwork and sheer panels, giving the upper section a jewellery-like finish. Instead of covering the entire gown in decoration, the detailing was concentrated around the bodice.

Tyla – Instagram
Following her arrival, several fashion publications pointed to the peacock reference behind the look. Tyla described it as a peacock-inspired Valentino piece with crystal embroidery and feather-like accents. Tyla referenced the inspiration during carpet interviews.
The turquoise satin skirt provided contrast to the heavily detailed upper section, keeping the design structured overall. Blue heels, layered diamond jewellery and hanging crystal accessories supported the styling choices without taking focus away from the gown.

Tyla – Instagram
This appearance continues Tyla’s developing approach to Met Gala dressing. In 2024, she wore the widely discussed Balmain sand dress that was altered during the event. In 2025, she shifted towards tailored design in a Jacquemus outfit inspired by André Leon Talley. The Valentino look for 2026 brought together aspects of both years, combining bold decoration with a cleaner, more refined shape.
The 2026 Met Gala theme, “Fashion Is Art”, encouraged guests to interpret fashion through creative direction. Tyla’s Valentino outfit stood out through its crystal work, structured form and peacock-inspired tones, becoming one of the night’s most talked-about fashion moments.
Fashion
Bonang Matheba Reinterprets Miranda Priestly at “The Devil Wears Prada 2” Johannesburg Premiere
At the Johannesburg premiere of The Devil Wears Prada 2, Bonang Matheba did not simply follow the theme; she approached it with precision. While the event invited guests to interpret the world of high-fashion authority, her appearance stood out through structured tailoring and a clear reference to the film’s visual language.
She wore a sharply tailored black pinstripe suit, designed with details that pushed it beyond a standard power suit. The jacket carried exaggerated, sculpted shoulders that shifted focus to the upper body. A deep plunging lapel opened into a corset-style bodice, creating contrast between coverage and form. The styling reflected the controlled authority associated with Miranda Priestly.

Bonang Matheba – Instagram
The pinstripes shifted in direction and spacing, narrowing at the waist to define the shape. Around the bust, the lines broke into circular formations, creating a graphic, high-contrast effect. This detail moved the outfit away from a corporate reference into a more stylised direction.
The skirt followed a long, pencil cut, maintaining a clean vertical line. There was no added volume or layering, keeping the overall finish precise and direct.

Bonang Matheba – Instagram
Her accessories aligned with the look. Narrow black sunglasses referenced the character’s signature detached presence. A bold red lip added contrast to the monochrome outfit, while her hair was pulled back tightly to keep attention on the structure of the outfit.
Footwear followed the same sharp direction, with pointed black heels that extended the clean lines.

Bonang Matheba – Instagram
The look worked because of its reference point and its restraint. In a setting where many leaned into themed dressing, this approach avoided excess. It showed clear direction and strong styling choices while still feeling current.
Among multiple interpretations in the room, her look felt less like imitation and more like reinterpretation. It reworked a familiar fashion idea into something suited to her public image, while keeping the original influence clear.
Fashion
Tyla Captivates at the 2026 Billboard Women in Music in Custom Javier Collazo
At the Billboard Women in Music, Tyla did not arrive in a conventional red-carpet look. She stepped out in a design that immediately commands focus and invites closer inspection.
The custom piece by Javier Collazo is designed less like a traditional dress and more like a sculptural piece. From the front, it appears as a feathered column with strategic coverage: dense, layered plumage runs vertically from the bust into a trailing extension, while the sides are sharply cut away. The form emphasises line, motion, and body control. There is no excess fabric.

Tyla – Instagram
Up close, the texture becomes the focus. The mix of brown, ivory, and black feathers adds depth without relying on embellishment. It avoids typical red-carpet detailing such as crystals or metallic finishes. Instead, the material creates motion. Even in still photos, the piece shows visible motion, with an intentionally raw finish that avoids a highly refined appearance.

Tyla – Instagram
From the back, the design changes significantly. The dress opens almost entirely, held together by minimal detailing, with featherwork concentrated lower on the body. The contrast between the structured front and exposed back defines the look. It avoids a single, fixed form.
Styling remains minimal. Transparent heels, soft glam makeup, and voluminous natural curls keep the focus on the outfit. The beauty styling is deliberate, with warm tones and clean skin that do not distract from the design.

Tyla – Instagram
The intent behind the look is clear. This look does not aim for broad appeal; it invites discussion and attention from multiple angles. In a setting where many attendees lean on familiar forms, this choice moves in a different direction without becoming exaggerated.
It sits between a fashion experiment and red-carpet defiance, preventing it from appearing costume-like.
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