Adding African Textiles and Beadwork into Your Home
Before you drape a length of shweshwe across your daybed or hang a Zulu beaded panel above the sofa, it is worth pausing. Not because you shouldn't, but because what you are working with is not fabric. It is history. And history, brought into a domestic space without understanding, becomes decoration. Decoration is the lesser thing. The South African textile and beadwork traditions are among the most complex and layered in the world. They survived colonialism, apartheid, and the global appetite for a simplified version of "African style" that has reduced centuries of sophisticated visual culture into a market category. They deserve better than that. So does your interior. Two Textiles, Two Completely Different Histories Start with what you are actually using. Shweshwe, the crisp, geometric-patterned cotton now widely recognised as a South African national textile, is not an indigenous fabric. It arrived via colonial trade routes, was gifted to a Basotho king by French mi...