Ifedolapo



Ifedolapo
The Crown Line
Ifedolapo (Love Is Wealth Made Visible) is not worn—it is welcomed. This is the Agbada for those who walk in beauty that does not boast, who turn stillness into influence and gentleness into strength. Cloaked in a soft lilac hue that whispers of royal serenity, Ifedolapo belongs to the kind of man whose presence heals rooms, whose quiet radiance makes even power feel like a poem.
The embroidery at its heart is a hymn in thread. Lilac upon lilac, it does not cry for attention—it rewards it. The sacred Yoruba motif blossoms with ethereal grace, echoing petals kissed by dawn, or prayers rising with incense from ancestral altars. The vertical strokes below descend like blessings, orderly and unbroken. This panel is not an embellishment—it is a benediction rendered in cloth. Ifedolapo does not arrive. It graces the space.
The garment is cut from a cotton-rich ceremonial weave with cloudlike softness and refined structure. The outer robe (awosoke) floats with wide, flowing panels that recall the robes of priest-kings and gentle rulers. Beneath, the awotele anchors the silhouette, fitted close to the body to give form to the sacred centerpiece. The sokoto is subtly tapered, holding its line with effortless elegance—allowing the full ensemble to move between quiet celebration and royal declaration. Topped with a perfectly matched Fila, Ifedolapo is not an outfit. It is a reverent offering.
Tailored by Presence
Begin by selecting your stature, robe, and cap — then we refine the fit.
Need help? View Sizing Guide
† Made to last in a way we're proud of — Learn about how we lead in sustainability.
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Outer Robe (Awosoke):
Tailored from a premium cotton-rich blend, the outer robe flows in gentle arcs that suggest majesty without excess. The fabric drapes like memory—present, graceful, and unforgettable. Designed to fall mid-calf, with an open-wing sleeve cut, it elevates movement into ceremony and presence into ritual.Inner Garment (Awotele):
In the same tender lilac hue, the awotele creates continuity and calm, framing the embroidery panel in tonal restraint. The neckline is shaped for modern nobility—clean, modest, and subtly regal. Its tailored shape ensures the outer layer sits with balance and breath.Trousers (Sokoto):
The sokoto offers a clean, precise taper. It features a side zipper and concealed drawstring for custom comfort, making the set suitable for extended wear at intimate gatherings, weddings, or rites of passage. It is discreet but never diminished—a quiet strength beneath layered dignity. -
Ifedolapo is crafted from a high-grade cotton blend with a soft ceremonial weave. The fabric is breathable, fluid, and quietly luxurious—perfect for garments meant to move with grace, not just grandeur. The embroidery is tonal lilac-on-lilac, achieved using a fine raised stitch technique that creates dimensionality without contrast. This allows the robe’s message to speak in whispers, not declarations—ideal for men whose strength lies in tenderness.
Material: Premium cotton-rich ceremonial blend
Weave: Silky matte weave with soft drape
Finish: Tone-on-tone sheen with gentle luster
Weight: ~190 gsm
Color: Regal Lilac with tonal embroidery
Total Garment Weight: ~1.65 kg (including full set and embroidery)
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Care Instructions: Dry cleaning is strongly recommended. For best results, use a professional service experienced in working with embroidered textiles. Avoid pressing directly on the embroidery—use a pressing cloth or opt for steam to preserve the texture and stitchwork.
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OUR RECOMMENDATIONS
The Crown Line
Akinlolu (Bravery Is God’s Strength) is forged, not fashioned. This is not an Agbada for the faint of presence—it is a regalia for those who move through the world with quiet magnitude. Cloaked in a dignified tone of imperial turquoise, Akinlolu is made for the man who commands without chaos, who has learned that restraint is the ultimate form of elegance. It is an ensemble for sovereigns—those whose confidence is inherited, not performed. Every inch of this garment has been conceived not for spectacle but for ceremony, not to impress but to consecrate.
At the center of Akinlolu lies an act of devotion: embroidery that does not decorate, but declares. Rendered in a luminous ochre gold, the threadwork blooms with sacred precision—invoking palm fronds, flame tips, and ancestral flora drawn from Yoruba iconography. The upper half of the panel swells with fullness, like wisdom passed down through generations; the lower half descends in golden vertical strokes that ground the garment in reverence. These lines are not ornamental—they are ritual inscriptions, rooting the garment between sky and soil. The wearer does not step forward in Akinlolu; he proceeds like an heir returning to his rightful post.
This Agbada is cut from a noble cotton blend with architectural weight and organic softness. The outer Agbada flows from the shoulders like a declaration, with wide wings that echo the presence of ancient kings. The awotele beneath is tailored with precision to frame the embroidery, anchoring the volume of the outer layer with form. The sokoto, discreetly tapered and exacting in fit, allows for both ceremony and motion—maintaining the garment’s composure whether seated in council or crossing thresholds. Paired with a perfectly matched Fila, Akinlolu is not clothing. It is a consecrated legacy stitched in cloth.
Tailored by Presence
Begin by selecting your stature, robe, and cap — then we refine the fit.
Need help? View Sizing Guide
The Crown Line
Ayòdélé (Joy Has Come Home) arrives like morning light—quiet but undeniable. Draped in a serene sky blue, this Agbada is an offering to peace, poise, and power restrained. It is a garment for the man who does not speak loudly because his presence has already spoken. There is no urgency in Ayòdélé’s design—only certainty. It is worn not to announce one's arrival, but to honor the path that brought him there. Every element is intentional, every seam a soft hymn of return.
The embroidery is a meditation in navy—rich, rooted, and regal. The motif blooms upward in a quiet crescendo of interwoven leaves, a nod to divine joy flourishing after a season of waiting. Beneath, the vertical lines fall with near-monastic discipline—invoking Yoruba ideographs of lineage, legacy, and the tether between heaven and home. There’s a reverence in the stitchwork, a stillness that does not ask for attention but commands it all the same. This is not just ornamentation—it is scripture written in thread.
Constructed from a refined cotton blend, Ayòdélé balances structure with softness. The outer Agbada is shaped to flow with gravity, not flair—its broad wings casting a silhouette of confidence. The inner awotele, cut with clean geometry, gives the garment form beneath the form. And the sokoto, discreet and quiet in construction, ensures freedom of movement with no sacrifice of elegance. Paired with a matching Fila, Ayòdélé is not a garment for the moment. It is for the man who lives as though every moment is sacred.
Tailored by Presence
Begin by selecting your stature, robe, and cap — then we refine the fit.
Need help? View Sizing Guide
The Crown Line
Adejoke (The Crown Has Cherished Gently) arrives not as spectacle but as sacred quiet. Clothed entirely in ivory—from thread to thought—it is an Agbada that humbles the eye and elevates the spirit. This is the garment of a man who walks in consecrated stillness, whose presence does not demand attention but deserves it. Adejoke is for rites of passage, for new beginnings, for days when the veil between the earthly and the divine is thinnest. It does not whisper—it blesses.
Every contour of the Agbada is sculpted with a reverent hand. The cotton blend, smooth as pressed prayer cloth, is chosen for how it moves like silence—measured, meditative, anchored. The outer layer drapes with monastic solemnity, while the embroidery at the chest ascends like smoke from incense. Pale ivory thread forms a sacred floral motif—each petal rising in rhythmic devotion, a symbol of purity unfurling. Beneath, vertical lines flow downward like sacred texts, written not in ink, but in devotion. This is not a design choice—it is ancestral memory stitched into form.
The matched fila, sculpted and soft, crowns the ensemble with restraint. Beneath, the inner awotele holds structure like an altar beneath a shrine. The sokoto—slim, immaculate, silent—completes the triad. Together, they do not form a suit. They form a sanctuary. Adejoke is not for performance. It is for the man who understands that royalty is not loud, and that gentleness, when wielded with wisdom, is the most powerful crown of all.
Tailored by Presence
Begin by selecting your stature, robe, and cap — then we refine the fit.
Need help? View Sizing Guide