Meet Marvin, the Emerging African Designer behind Stella Nata®
What is your dream for Stella Nata®?
My dream for Stella Nata is to one day showcase during Milan or Paris Fashion Week. As well as collaborating with some people I’ve admired as I started this journey. I also wanted to show people of color, like me, all around the world that anything is possible as long as you have faith no matter what you believe in.
If Stella Nata® was a feeling, what would it be?
Feeling born again.
Your latest projects, captured in settings of both climatic disaster and village land respectively, enlivened not only Stella Nata® but the environment. Can you describe your brand’s connection with nature?
I think us humans are connected with nature, as we are also a part of nature, it is our environment. For instance that's why I love shooting outside because I feel like nature helps tell/capture the story because it speaks for itself. It represents our body and soul, that’s why in one of the shots from the new collection I had the model laying in the water as if he has been born again, like when you first get baptized.
When was the last time you felt born again?
Everytime I go into a collection I feel like I’m entering a new chapter of my life for a certain time period, so I would say as of last month.
If you could tell any story, what narrative would Stella Nata® exist in?
The story behind Stella Nata® is about having that urge no matter how much people try to doubt you or downplay your dreams and goals that it’s not going to stop you from having faith that you can achieve anything. That’s why the brand's creed is “A sign of hope through faith.” I want to be a living testimony that people of all ages can look at and be like we can do it too.
How is New York and Ghana connected to you and Stella Nata®?
Ghana is the culture behind Stella Nata so I wanted to incorporate its afropunk style in a way that is technical and military influenced with New York's high fashion urban style, so intertwining both I think is a beautiful mix that hasn’t really been done.
Describe your connection to the community in Takoradi, Ghana.
So growing up my father would tell me a lot of stories about how he and his grandpa would go fishing in the Takoradi fishing harbor, so I wanted to incorporate some of the only memories that I had of my grandpa.
What are the religious or spiritual implications behind Stella Nata®?
I grew up in a very religious household so religion does play a big role. The spiritual implication behind Stella Nata is having higher sense of purpose and hope behind whatever you do.
What questions do you have as you emerge into the industry?
What does it take to get noticed as an upcoming designer? Does a fashion degree matter if your design language is strong? How do you successfully build a brand from the ground up? What advice would you give someone coming into the industry?
What does your design process look like?
Once I have an idea in my head I immediately sketch it in my sketchbook, then later on I go into Illustrator and start converting the sketch on there to make my tech packs. I also design based on how I’m feeling at the time. But I mainly get inspiration from old films and a lot of African military warfare.
You collaborated with local Ghanian creatives on your previous campaign. Can you describe the team?
So I actually saw the photographer, Paakofi Adjei, on my friend's story who shared some of his work. So I followed [Paakofi], then some months later I messaged him to see if he wanted to work on a campaign for my next drop. I wanted to do something different that others weren’t doing. So we orchestrated everything over WhatsApp for about three months. Shout out to the whole team that contributed to making this happen.
What’s next for Stella Nata®?
Currently I’m working on my next collection, which should be debuting sometime this fall but we also plan to expand our team as we keep on advancing. I’m actually working on my first womenswear piece this collection, eventually I want to start getting into doing more womenswear so I can be more experimental, I would love to get into tailoring as well.