Fisayo Longe’s entrepreneurial journey reads like a modern fairy tale—except it’s built on intuition, resilience, and an unwavering belief that fashion can be both beautiful and empowering.
What started as a personal exploration of style matured into Kai Collective, a London-based brand that has redefined how women see—and express—themselves across sizes, cultures, and borders.
Originally raised in Nigeria before finishing secondary school in the U.K., Fisayo’s path diverged from law school when she instead took up a gap-year role at KPMG.
It was her artistic spark—fanned by travel, blogging, and a fashion internship—that ignited her creative trajectory.
Starting her blog Mirror Me in 2012 was a first brush with storytelling; soon, she leaned into her own designs.
With an £8,000 loan from her mother and a suitcase full of timeless fabric inspirations, she launched Kai Collective in 2016.
Kai Collective wasn’t merely a brand—it was a vessel for self-expression. Fisayo’s designs offered an alternative to Western beauty standards, celebrating bodies and styles that had long been overlooked.
The label’s signature Gaia Dress, released in 2020, was a cultural moment—semi-sheer, marbled, and size-inclusive, it sold out almost immediately and ignited conversations across social media.
The dress graced runways, was featured in Elle, Vogue, and even featured in Beyoncé’s directory of Black-owned businesses.
That spark of creativity has lit steady success.
As of early 2025, Kai Collective surpassed £2 million in annual revenue, part of an impressive £6+ million in lifetime sales.
The brand now stands among the global 4% of startups that exceed $1 million in yearly revenue.
Recognition followed. In 2021, Forbes included Fisayo on its 30 Under 30 Europe list in the Art & Culture category—but she didn’t just rest on that merit; she celebrated the women, the community, and the story that carried her there.
What defines Fisayo’s leadership is her blend of authenticity and empathy. She directly attributes Kai’s ethos to her own experiences—size exclusion, cultural resistance, creative constraints—and has built a brand where every customer can feel visible.
“A lot of women have said things like: ‘After I had kids… I wore this dress and I thought I was Beyoncé!’,” she has said emotionally.
Her design philosophy transcends aesthetics. Prints like “Gaia” evoke the earth, while others, such as “Irun Didi,” nod to cultural markers like Afro hair and its political weight—a deliberate embrace of heritage and modernity.
Though born from fashion, Kai Collective’s aspirations extend into a broader lifestyle and sustainable future.
Fisayo has spoken openly about the brand’s desire to expand into sustainable materials and responsible manufacturing—it isn’t just building clothes, it’s shaping a legacy.
Fisayo Longe is not just designing garments—she’s building dignity. From a gap-year auditor to a global brand founder, she’s invented a space where inclusivity meets luxury, where self-expression and heritage walk hand-in-hand.
Her story reminds us that when you listen to your gut, embrace your authentic voice, and nurture a community, entrepreneurship becomes a movement—not just a business.
Kai Collective is more than clothing—it’s empowerment, worn.
Image Credi: Marie Claire UK