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UK-trained Nigerian fashion designer and creative director of Tesslo, Tessy Oliseh-Amaize, has called on Nigeria’s Ministry of Art, Culture and Creative Economy Hannatu Musawa to urgently intervene in the Nigerian fashion industry by developing regulatory frameworks to make the industry more profitable for designers. While the Nigerian fashion industry is often touted as the next big thing in the creative industries, it might not replicate the success of Afrobeats on the global scene, she said in the June 6 episode of “Fashion Professor,” a popular Instagram vlog series. One of the primary obstacles highlighted in the episode, delivered in Pidgin, with an English translation, is the lack of regulatory oversight in the industry.

Oliseh-Amaize pointed out that while designers invest time and resources into creating unique designs, they often face the problem of unauthorised replication by local tailors. This phenomenon, she lamented, deprives designers of rightful earnings and undermines the industry’’s integrity. Oliseh-Amaize also underscored the absence of a regulatory framework for tailors in Nigeria, contrasting it with what obtains in some sectors, such as transportation, where even motorcycles are required to have licence plates.



The lapses in regulatory standards, she argued, leaves designers vulnerable to exploitation and intellectual property theft. Another issue addressed in the episode is the proliferation of fashion academies across the country without cl.

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