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Some looks you admire. Some looks you study. This one from Sefiya you sit with for a while because there is always something new to notice. The concept is inspired by the Garden of Eden, and every single element in this shoot was placed with a purpose. The flowers, the fruit, the serpent, the butterflies, the waterfall behind her. Nothing here is decoration for the sake of it. Everything is telling a story, and the fashion is right at the centre of it.
The gown is split into two very distinct parts and that contrast is exactly what makes it work so well. The top half is a structured olive green corset covered in glittering beadwork, and a crystal embellished serpent wraps itself around the bodice from the waist up. That serpent is not just a prop. It is sewn into the look, part of the outfit itself, which makes it feel more like wearable sculpture than costume. The sheer corset underneath shows just enough skin to keep the look sensual without pulling focus from the artistry.

The lower half of the gown shifts into something completely different. It is a wide, full ballgown silhouette in iridescent pink that catches light and changes tone depending on the angle. Three dimensional pink florals sit at the waistline where the two halves of the gown meet, acting as a bridge between the darker, earthier top and the bright romantic lower half. Green butterfly designare scattered across the lower gown, which ties the whole garden theme together without being too obvious about it.
What Sefiya and the creative team behind this shoot understood is that fashion has the ability to carry a narrative. The best editorial looks are not just about dressing well. They are about making someone feel something when they look at the image.
The Garden of Eden is one of the most recognised stories in the world. By placing it inside a fashion context, the concept becomes instantly familiar but also completely fresh. You recognise the fruit, the serpent, the lush garden. But you are seeing it through a fashion lens, on a Black woman, in a gown that blends African fashion craftsmanship with high fantasy aesthetics. That combination is powerful.
The choice to make the serpent part of the actual garment is the strongest creative decision in this entire look. It removes the boundary between the story and the clothing. She is not wearing a costume inspired by Eden. She is dressed as someone who belongs there.

Olive green and pink is not a pairing you see often , but this shoot makes a strong argument for it. The green reads as earthy and natural, rooted in the garden concept. The pink reads as soft, romantic, and feminine. Together they create a balance that feels neither too dark nor too sweet. The iridescent quality of the gown fabric is also doing important work here. It gives the look a dreamlike, slightly otherworldly quality that fits perfectly with the Eden theme.
This is fashion as art. And it is some of the most compelling visual storytelling Nigerian fashion has produced.
Which detail in this look stopped you the most, the serpent, the florals or the butterflies?



