TSHEPO Jeans Celebrates 10 Years Anniversary

Date:

It’s been a decade since TSHEPO Jeans left behind a humble car boot dream to become a major fashion movement. In 2025, TSHEPO Jeans is marking a milestone decade of defying the odds, sewing stories, and styling wardrobes across South Africa and the globe.

Founded in 2015 by Tshepo Mohlala, alias “The Jean Maker,” the brand has been synonymous with premium African denim and storytelling. TSHEPO Jeans started small, today having a presence in prime locations like Hyde Park Corner with flagship stores and a pop-up at Sandton City Mall.

A Decade Of Denim Dominance

TSHEPO Jeans is not just jeans; it’s heritage, identity, and pride. Its crown logo trademark has adorned the behinds of locals and international icons, such as Meghan Markle. Each piece has a story to tell, woven with threads of African craftsmanship and culture.

“Denim is our canvas, but storytelling is our craft,” declares Mohlala. “Each stitch, each seam, bears the burden of our past and the promise of our future.”

Awards, Collaboration, and Cultural Impact

The brand’s influence hasn’t gone unnoticed. In 2022, TSHEPO Jeans was named Overall Top Brand at the first-ever Top 16 Youth-Owned Brands Awards, also taking home the Top Apparel Brand award.

Partnerships have been central to the journey of TSHEPO. From partnering with Woolworths on a special-edition tee celebrating the South African Constitution to dropping the “Last Stories of Culture” capsule collection with Castle Milk Stout, honoring cultural matriarchs Ouma Katrina Esau and Gogo Madosini, the brand seamlessly couples fashion with meaningful stories.

Most recently, TSHEPO collaborated with The Singleton, a globally renowned Single Malt Scotch Whisky brand, further establishing itself as a lifestyle brand that transcends clothing.

Sustainability And Africanism at its Core

TSHEPO Jeans is committed to sustainability and commemorating African heritage. TSHEPO Jeans sources cotton from Zimbabwe, dyes it with old Japanese methods rooted in African heritage, and weaves it on a twill system born in Morocco. The entire fashion collection is produced in their atelier in Victoria Yards, Johannesburg.

“We’re not making jeans; we’re preserving culture, driving sustainability, and empowering communities,” emphasizes Mohlala.

In celebration of this milestone, TSHEPO Jeans will be launching a range of activities, including a retrospective show, limited-edition releases, and community outreach initiatives with the goal of nurturing the next generation of African designers.

“This celebration isn’t about turning back; it’s about pushing forward,” says Mohlala. “We’re looking forward to continuing on our journey, sharing African stories stitch by stitch.”

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Latest 2025 Ankara Trend and Festivals Spamming the Internet

Ankara is having its moment and it's more fabulous than ever, sweeping through TikTok's #AnkaraChallenge with a whopping 1,871+ posts that transform scraps of fabric into red-carpet-ready looks. ... But from Texas's 15th Annual Ankara Festival (April 25–26) to Pinterest boards like AnkaraCurvyStyles disseminating body-positive love, this cloth celebration never ends.

Easter Ticket Sales Specials for Africa Fashion Week London, 2025 Are Ongoing 

Africa Fashion Week London (AFWL) is celebrating its 15th anniversary of supporting African heritage, innovation, and creativity on the global stage.... For a limited time, AFWL2025 is offering designers a 15% discount off their standard designer package on payment within the Easter promotion timeframe.

Dazzle Me Couture Bringing Original African Prints Back to Life as a Diaspora Designer

Emerging to the forefront is London-based designer Oluwadamilola Ayeni of Dazzle Me Couture, whose whimsical reinterpretation of traditional African motifs is turning heads, making waves, and redefining the meaning of what it is to be fashion-forward in our increasingly globalized world.

The Timeless Aesthetic Value and Cultural Significance of African Aso Oke

Aso Oke is not fabric—it's art and symbol of pride of Yoruba Nigeria, Benin, and Togo culture. Aso Oke literally means "top cloth" in Yoruba and has been hand-stitched by talented craftsmen on hand-held narrow looms and woven into cultural expression, celebration, and status for centuries.