Born in 2020 under the creative direction of designer Florentina Agu, Hertunba quickly positioned itself as one of Nigeria’s most compelling fashion names. The brand began as a search for elegance rooted in heritage — a way to bring traditional Nigerian textiles into contemporary wardrobes. What emerged was a label that merges cultural storytelling, sustainability and modern sophistication.

 


Hertunba doesn’t dress bodies — it dresses identities: women who carry confidence, culture and charisma in every stitch.

 

Weaving Tradition into Modern Silhouettes

Hertunba | Instagram

 

At the heart of Hertunba’s design language lies ancestral Nigerian craftsmanship. The brand revives hand-woven fabrics like Akwete (and often Aso Oke) — materials traditionally anchored in cultural heritage. Through skillful tailoring and modern cuts, these fabrics are reimagined into structured dresses, flowing kaftans, blazers, suits and statement-ready co-ords.

 

What makes Hertunba’s pieces stand out is how they balance form and function — a kaftan might flow with ease, while a midi dress may carry architectural precision. The result is a collection where culture doesn’t feel costume-y but feels like lived elegance.

 

Sustainability, Craft and Purpose

Hertunba | Instagram

 

Hertunba isn’t just about aesthetics. From day one, the brand has stood firm in its commitment to sustainability and social responsibility. Garments are crafted in small batches; production waste is minimised through up-cycling and careful material use.

 

Moreover, the label channels a portion of its profits toward adult-education programmes for underprivileged women — a move that transforms every piece into more than clothing: it becomes a gesture of empowerment and community upliftment.

 

In this way, Hertunba aligns fashion with conscience: creating wearable art that respects heritage, honours craftsmanship and gives back.

 

Collections as Cultural Narratives

Hertunba | Instagram

 

Each Hertunba collection feels like a chapter in a larger story.

• The 2025 “JOY Collection” celebrated the resilience, creativity and spirit of Nigerian women. With bold hues — tangerine, leafy green, fuchsia, midnight blue — and pieces from kaftans to minis to flowing maxis, the collection was a “reclamation of light and joy amid scarcity.”

• The “Sound Wave Collection” leaned into music-inspired energy: playful silhouettes, rich textures and a merging of up-cycled materials with traditional weaves; a symphony of sound, colour and culture translated into garments.

• Past collections such as “Lulu Land” explored heritage in dream-like, colourful forms — reworking indigenous weaving from across Nigeria into modern outfits that feel both rooted and visionary.

These collections don’t just clothe women — they tell stories. They give wearers a sense of history, identity and belonging.

 

Why Hertunba Resonates — Locally and Globally

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• Culturally grounded: Hertunba draws from deep Nigerian textile traditions and honours their origin through every design.

• Empowering: With custom sizing and tailored cuts, the brand affirms that every woman deserves elegance that fits — literally and symbolically.

• Ethical and conscientious: The emphasis on sustainable practices and community upliftment adds weight — wearing Hertunba means wearing values.

• Fearlessly expressive: From structured suits to bold kaftans and colourful dresses, the pieces communicate strength, identity and individuality.


For diasporic women, global travellers, or anyone who wants to wear their roots proudly — without compromising on elegance or modernity — Hertunba offers more than clothes. It offers a statement: that heritage can be luxury, tradition can be chic, and culture can live in every stitch.

 

Hertunba isn’t just designing garments — it is weaving heritage into contemporary style. It’s creating a space where fashion becomes identity and where roots and runway live side by side.

 

Hertunba | Instagram

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