In the world of fashion, the ones who change the game are rarely defined by a single collection, dress, or runway moment. They are defined by the platforms they build, the stages on which entire creative economies come alive. Lucilla Booyzen is one such visionary.
As the founder of South African Fashion Week (SAFW), she did not just create an annual event; she ignited a movement that continues to elevate African design on the global stage.
Booyzen’s journey into fashion began with an acute awareness of the continent’s untapped creative potential.
In the early 2000s, South Africa’s fashion industry was rich in talent but fragmented in opportunity.
Designers with world‑class vision often struggled to find a stage that reflected the depth and diversity of their creativity. Booyzen saw this not as a limitation, but as a call to action: if a world‑class platform did not exist, she would build one.
In 2001, that vision became reality with the launch of South African Fashion Week, a platform conceived to showcase the continent’s most promising talent and bridge the gap between local designers and global recognition.
From its earliest editions, SAFW distinguished itself not by mimicry of European or American fashion calendars, but through a celebration of cultural identity, craftsmanship, and innovation rooted in African stories.
At the heart of Booyzen’s leadership is a deep belief that fashion is more than clothing but that it is a reflection of cultural confidence and economic potential.
Under her stewardship, SAFW became a rigorous business ecosystem as much as a creative showcase.
It connected designers with buyers, media, and collaborators; introduced mentorship and business development opportunities; and helped bridge the divide between runway artistry and commercial sustainability.
In an industry where visibility often begets viability, SAFW’s influence has been transformative.
Designers who walked its runways have gone on to secure international stockist placements, participate in global fashion weeks, and collaborate with major brands.
Booyzen’s platform became not merely a calendar event, but a launchpad: a place where talent is discovered, careers are forged, and African fashion is taken seriously by global buyers and media alike.
With all of this Booyzen’s vision has never been confined to the runway alone. She understands that sustainable industry growth requires infrastructure, education, industry standards, commercial partnerships, and pathways to export markets.
SAFW’s strategy under her guidance has therefore extended into capacity building and industry advocacy, helping position South Africa’s fashion sector as a contributor to job creation, tourism, and cultural export.
Her approach reflects an important shift: fashion, she insists, is not a soft cultural add‑on but a serious economic player.
By framing SAFW as both a creative showcase and a business platform, Booyzen helped change how stakeholders from corporate sponsors to government agencies, perceive and invest in the creative economy.
What makes Booyzen’s impact especially enduring is that it is not built on temporary buzz, but on sustained ecosystem development.
South African Fashion Week has hosted hundreds of designers, drawn global media attention, and helped internationalise South African style without erasing its local roots.
In doing so, it has played a critical role in affirming Africa’s place in the global fashion conversation not as outsiders borrowing from Western trends, but as originators with a distinctive, confident voice.
Booyzen’s work is a testament to the power of intentional platforms. She understood early on that talent needs more than admiration, it needs infrastructure, opportunity, and visibility.
By building a stage that embodies all three, she changed not only how South African fashion is seen, but how it sees itself.
Lucilla Booyzen is not just a founder; she is an visioneer of cultural economy: someone who recognised that fashion’s value lies not just in the garments it produces, but in the careers it launches, the stories it elevates, and the markets it expands.
In the future of African fashion, global, confident, and commercially serious, her imprint will remain unmistakable.

