When Edward Enninful became the first Black editor in chief of British Vogue, few at the heights of the elitist world of fashion wanted to confront how it failed to represent the world we live in. But Edward, a champion of inclusion
throughout his life, rapidly changed that.
Edward grew up in Ghana in a world of beauty, riotous color, and strong Black women. Nurtured by his mother, a dressmaker of fabulous garments with a flair for drama, he learned in her atelier what it meant for a woman to see herself as truly beautiful. But at the threat of violence, his family fled the country, becoming refugees in London. There, Edward found himself facing a more insidious and institutionalized danger: a culture of diminished opportunities and thwarted hopes, a country where he would be judged harshly for the color of his skin.
Discovered by a fashion editor on the Underground when he was sixteen, Edward was soon in the middle of the heady, wild, and vibrant fashion scene of Eighties London. A Black, gay, working-class refugee, he was constantly othered, but he found a home in fashion. These were the days of punks, post-punks, and the Buffalo movement, when you might run into Galliano, Boy George, and Madonna in a dingy club listening to groove and Afrobeat. Here, Edward found the freedom to share with people the world as he saw it, and to tell the story of the times we're in.