The Afrofa logo draws inspiration from the carved masks, ceremonial faces, and quiet visual language of Ghana and the wider West African tradition. In Ghana, where the founder was raised, Adinkra symbols are part of everyday life — woven into cloth, pressed onto walls, present like a language understood before it is named. Years later, in an European city far removed from that world, the logo emerged as a quiet act of return — not a reinvention, but a way of holding onto what endures and carrying it forward into new light.
The name itself says enough. Afro — not just a prefix, but a recognition of a continent rich in meaning, creativity, and history. Fa — to take, to receive, to embrace. Together, Afrofa becomes a simple idea: take what has been passed down. The logo reflects that idea. It isn’t just a visual mark — it’s something to connect with. Something to carry. A reminder that what we inherit can still shape how we move today.
The people who wear Afrofa come from different places, with different stories. Some grew up surrounded by these symbols. Some are reconnecting across distance. Others are discovering them for the first time, and feel something resonate, even if they can’t quite explain why. What brings them together isn’t background. It’s a shared curiosity. A sense that meaning matters. It is the instinct to look deeper — at where things come from. Wearing the Afrofa logo is a small, personal way of holding onto that — and continuing the story in your own way.









