Valentine Avoh is a Belgian fashion designer of Ivorian descent. She is a wedding dress designer, writer, journalist and photographer. She started her own label in 2015 after working for fashion designers Alexander McQueen, Samantha Shaw, Alexis Mabille, Sam Andrès Milano, Spanish wedding dress label Pronovias and designer Marc Philippe Coudeyre. Following the social movement Black Lives Matter in the United States, Valentine Avoh has been published in The Coveteur and The New York Times as a young and talented European Black female bridal designer and on Brides (magazine) as one of the "20 Black Wedding Dress Designers to Know" in 2021.[1][2]

Valentine Avoh
Born (1983-02-16) February 16, 1983 (age 41)
Brussels
NationalityBelgian
EducationLondon College of Fashion
OccupationWedding Dress Designer
Children1
Websitehttp://valentineavoh.com

Early life and education

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Valentine Avoh grew up in Brussels in Belgium in the towns of Tervueren and Wezembeek-Oppem in the Flemish part of Belgium with her mother an accountant and her stepfather an economist. Early on, she was a creative child, she always loved fashion and sketch.[3] She studied high school at the Institut Don Bosco in the town of Woluwe-Saint-Pierre and attended a boarding school where she initiated a project of a fashion magazines section in her school library. She then trained in business and communication at the Haute Ecole ICHEC before starting a more creative career.

Valentine Avoh studied fashion design and pattern cutting at London College of Fashion where she graduated in 2006.

Career

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She had her first working experience at Alexander McQueen as an intern at the design studio for two seasons until her final collaboration for the collection Spring-Summer 2010, which was the last collection done by McQueen during his life. At Alexander MQueen, Avoh discovered the importance of taking time: “I learned the importance of time, to design beautiful things you need to slow down”. This six months internship was decisive in her career: “Working at McQueen was really life-changing for me, as I was fascinated by his creative process and the patience put into each of his pieces, but more importantly, how he worked each fabric and transformed it to make it its own. As having my own business was something I’ve always wanted since childhood, the idea kept flourishing in my head until 2015, when I finally decided to launch the brand and opened my atelier in Brussels.” (The Coveteur, 2020)[4]

In 2007, Valentine Avoh worked as a junior fashion designer for London-based wedding dress designer Samantha Shaw. Then, moving to Paris, she worked for the Haute-Couture designer Alexis Mabille in 2009. The same year Valentine started designing her first wedding dress for a friend using ostrich feathers and developed more and more interest in this field. For a few years, she kept on working for design labels while designing and sewing wedding dresses for private clients.

Following her Italian partner, she moved to Milan and worked for fashion label San Andrès. She was also shooting street style photographs for her online blog. She then developed three wedding dresses to advertise her craft and debut her own label. Back to Brussels, she worked as a seamstress for alterations for the Spanish wedding dress label Pronovias, she designed and signed her first commercial model called “Jackie” for the Brussels-based wedding dress boutique Love Sweet Etc.[5] The design “Jackie” became very successful and confirmed her wish to evolve as a bridal designer.[6]

In 2014, she made two dresses for Queen Mathilde of Belgium under the name of fashion designer Marc Philippe Coudeyre, she was at the time his head of atelier and developed the patterns and sewn the dresses after fitting sessions with the Queen Mathilde of Belgium. Queen Mathilde of Belgium wore her dress during the 2014 edition of the celebration of the Fête Nationale Belge during the National ball. The Queen has worn this dress several times thereafter. In 2015, Valentine Avoh founded her eponym label in Brussels and then opened her own space in 2017 called “the Atelier Valentine Avoh”.[7]

Atelier Valentine Avoh

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Valentine Avoh's inspirations are often extracted from movies from the 30s to 50s when women were ultra-feminine. She is inspired by actresses like Jean Harlow, Marlene Dietrich and Dorothy Dandridge. She describes her style as minimal playing with see-through fabrics such as silk, lace, tulle and materials like feathers and delicate embroideries. “I think of my dresses as red carpet pieces, designed to make a strong impression, but more importantly, they are for all the women who wish to highlight their femininity without compromising ease.” (The New York Times)[1]

Her designs are made in her atelier in Etterbeek, some of her embroideries are hand-beaded in India. In her interview with Yeba Olaye, she expressed with humour how specific the wedding dress business is, with a constant need to renew a clientele “who are generally not returning customers” which is a constant challenge for wedding dress designers.

In an article of the Coveteur by Sana F. Khan, Avoh expresses the sources of her ideas: “The Atelier Valentine Avoh came as a desire to revive my love for haute couture in Belgium, and design refined fluid, and delicately detailed wedding dresses. My label is inspired by the golden age of cinéma, jazz, and iconic women, yet my designs are for all those who wish to highlight their femininity without compromising ease. I want to create showstopping pieces which could easily be worn for a wedding or on the red carpet.”[4]

In 2021 Valentine made a wedding dress for the actress Clark Backo in the Amazon Prime rom-com I want you back set to release in February 2022.

References

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  1. ^ a b Braff, Danielle (2020-10-07). "Get to Know These Black Bridal Designers". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  2. ^ Editors, Brides. "20 Black Wedding Dress Designers to Know". Brides. Retrieved 2021-07-01. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  3. ^ "Les wedding'preneurs : Episode 35 : Valentine, créatrice de la maison de robe de mariée Valentine Avoh sur Apple Podcasts". Apple Podcasts (in French). Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  4. ^ a b "Bridal Designers of Color to Know—and Support Forever". Coveteur: Inside Closets, Fashion, Beauty, Health, and Travel. 2020-07-09. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  5. ^ "Comment l'industrie du mariage se remet du Covid-19 ? La réponse avec Valentine Avoh". www.lofficiel.be (in French). Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  6. ^ Episode 1 - Valentine Avoh (Wedding designer) "Persévérer, avancer et surtout se lancer", 14 February 2020, retrieved 2021-07-01
  7. ^ Hoo, Fawnia Soo (24 February 2021). "How to Shop For Your Dream Wedding Outfit to Dress Up or Down Later, Just in Case". Fashionista. Retrieved 2021-07-01.