Lesego Malatsi’s passion for fashion found him studying and graduating from the Peninsula Technikon with a National Diploma in Clothing Design. He went on to establish his own company called Anthony Couture cc which has grown to become a successful fashion house, marketing and distributing fashion throughout South Africa and Internationally.
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Lesego Malatsi
Lesego Malatsi’s passion for
fashion found him studying and graduating from the Peninsula Technikon with a
National Diploma in Clothing Design. He went on to establish his own company
called Anthony Couture cc which has grown to become a successful fashion house,
marketing and distributing fashion throughout South Africa and Internationally.
He has taken part in a number of interviews on issues pertaining
to the South African Fashion Industry and has featured in the print and
electronic media. He has dressed emerging music artists for their music videos
and television presenters for their programmes and events.
Apart from being the sole managing member of Anthony Couture he
has enjoyed many other involvements in the industry, including being
Chairperson for the Young Designers Workshop (2002-2003) as well as holding a
board membership position in Ekhaya Youth Development Initiative during the
same period.
He became involved as a Director/ COO of Mzansi Designers
Institute in line with his vision to be instrumental in bringing about positive
change and development in the South African Fashion Industry.
Lesego Malatsi
When Lesego Malatsi
started making clothes, he didn’t think beyond being able to support himself.
Today, the once unemployed fashion school graduate has a thriving business, a
shop in Soweto’s Maponya Mall and a growing market in the UK. He’s also a
Richard Branson School of Entrepreneurship graduate and the only South African
designer to have showcased his work in the 2011 London Fashion Week’s
‘Fashion’s Finest Renaissance’ event, an experience he describes as “the
fulfilment of a lifelong dream.''
Getting off the ground
It’s a story, like
so many others, with humble beginnings and starts with a sewing project in the
streets of Soweto. “My mother invested my deceased father’s pension payout in
my fashion school
education and I was the first person in my family to study beyond school. So when I graduated and couldn’t find a job, I knew I’d exhausted the family’s income and would have to make a plan,” says Malatsi.
education and I was the first person in my family to study beyond school. So when I graduated and couldn’t find a job, I knew I’d exhausted the family’s income and would have to make a plan,” says Malatsi.
With nothing other
than ideas for beautiful garments, Malatsi approached a group of women in a
Soweto sewing project. “I realised I’d have to use what I had, which was my
training and my ideas. They had equipment that I needed so I proposed a barter
deal with them. They would let me use their equipment and in return I’d give
them professional clothing patterns,” he explains. This still left the problem
of purchasing fabric, but Malatsi managed to convince his first client to pay a
deposit to cover these costs.
That deposit was
Malatsi’s first and only start-up capital. “Once that first garment was made I
made a small profit and, as word spread in the community orders slowly started
to trickle in, and I could use the money I made to buy more fabric and make
more garments,” he explains.
It’s business in
its simplest but possibly most elegant form: make a small profit off an initial
sale, plough it back into the business and use it to increase production and
make more profit.
Defining a unique style
Over time, Malatsi
became known in his neighbourhood as the go-to-guy for African fashion for
formal occasions. From initially making only bespoke garments, he slowly
developed commercial ranges based on his more successful items.
He’s worked hard at
developing his own African-inspired style. “I deliberately didn’t reference
European fashion magazines. I wanted to create an Afro-centric look that
appeals to any race or colour, but that still has an international flavour,” he
explains. Initially he was known for his ‘traditional clothing’ but that has
evolved and a unique style has emerged over time into ethnic-inspired and
finally the Afro-centric style he has today.
Standing out – and serendipity
This signature
style is undoubtedly one of his key success factors and it’s what made a
particular tourist from Cambridge notice his garments in the window of his
Maponya Mall shop in Soweto, in late 2010. What followed was a remarkable
series of fortunate events.
“She was an
archeology student and when she got back to Cambridge she found she needed to
send the garment back for alterations and we got corresponding. She saw
snippets of one of my shows on the Internet and wanted to start a business to
import my clothes to the UK. She asked if I’d be willing to make a trip there
to showcase some garments,” says Malatsi.
It just so happened
that at that time the Branson Centre had been helping him raise funds to attend
a show in Los Angeles for which Malatsi had developed a range. “That trip got
cancelled so here I was with the money, the range and an invitation to travel
overseas,” he continues. He showcased the line at the first ever Black Ethnic
Minority Week in the UK. Slowly, orders started coming in.
The Cambridge
archeology student wrote her thesis on African apparel, using Malatsi’s work as
an example of how it had been modernised. “She asked me to showcase my clothes
at her thesis presentation before a panel of judges and we won a prize of £1
000,” Malatsi relates. Some philanthropists, who just happened to be in the
audience, added a £6 000 donation to the prize money and Malatsi secured retail
space, setting up shop in Cambridge’s high street.
Looking ahead
Malatsi has big
plans for expansion in South Africa and for the development of an exciting
accessories line. “People keep asking me things like ‘What socks do I wear with
this outfit?’ or ‘Don’t you have something my child can wear?’ and I realised
there was a real market for bags, shoes and jewellery – even children’s wear
and homewear. I’ll be pushing this hard in the year ahead,” he concludes.
Making the most of opportunities
There can be little
doubt that luck played an important role in Malatsi’s story but so too has his
ability to take opportunities and make the most of them. From his association
with the Branson Centre to the interest shown by a single UK customer in
selling his clothes overseas, he’s also managed to establish relationships that
have opened doors to new opportunities.
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