The Duafe is the image of a traditional wooden comb — one of the most personal and treasured objects in Akan women's lives. Used for combing and plaiting hair, the comb was an intimate tool of self-care, and Akan women kept it among their most valued possessions. The symbol was stamped onto cloth worn at ceremonies celebrating womanhood, beauty, and life.
For the Akan, Duafe represents the full set of virtues attributed to women: care, love, patience, beauty, and goodness. It is not a passive symbol — it speaks to the active, nurturing power of womanhood and the importance of tending to oneself as well as others. The Akan saw self-care not as vanity, but as the foundation of a person's capacity to give.
Duafe is worn today as an affirmation of feminine identity and strength. It honours the depth of what it means to be a woman — not narrowly defined, but in its fullest sense: the ability to hold complexity, offer care, and carry beauty through difficult things.









