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GEORGE ESHUN IS REDEFINING ZERO-WASTE LUXURY IN GHANA’S FASHION INDUSTRY

By Josephine Agbonkhese


In an industry where sustainability is often reduced to marketing buzzwords, Ghanaian designer George Eshun is doing the work for real. Long before “eco-fashion” became a trend on the continent, Eshun was quietly developing a zero-waste cutting methodology that is now positioning him as one of West Africa’s most forward-thinking design voices.


His approach goes beyond avoiding offcuts or repurposing scraps it is a design-first philosophy, where patterns, silhouettes and panel placements are engineered from the start to eliminate excess, without compromising the luxury finish his work is known for.


Eshun’s zero-waste cutting system applies couture-level precision to sustainability. Rather than allowing environmental considerations to dilute his aesthetic, he leans into the challenge. His garments are built from modular pattern blocks, engineered curves and strategic paneling, ensuring that every inch of fabric serves a purpose.


In collections across eveningwear, structured print pieces and red-carpet custom looks, Eshun has proven that sustainability can coexist with indulgence. His designs remain rich, sculptural and meticulously finished evidence that zero-waste does not mean “minimal” or “plain,” but rather intentional and intelligent craft. Industry watchers note that this is the rare sustainability model that actually scales.


Eshun’s zero-waste philosophy has also begun influencing Ghana’s fashion education ecosystem. Several design schools, pattern-making tutors and independent training hubs have adopted elements of his method as case studies, encouraging young designers to rethink the relationship between creativity, fabric economy and construction logic.
Students are exposed to Eshun’s work not only as inspiration but as a technical blueprint a living example of how luxury design can be achieved without the environmental cost commonly associated with premium cut-and-sew production.


For many emerging designers, his method has become a bridge between sustainability demands and commercial reality.
Eshun’s innovation is not theoretical it has earned him respect within Ghana’s fashion industry, where designers and stylists increasingly cite his precision as a benchmark for contemporary craft.

His red-carpet custom commissions, including high-profile appearances at the Accra Indie Filmfest and other regional platforms, have further amplified his visibility and validated his technique at a professional standard.


The designer’s work demonstrates an understanding rarely mastered at his stage: sustainability is not an aesthetic choice, but a systems approach. And he has built a system that works.


As the creative engine behind his brand Geovante, Eshun is already operating at a level well beyond “emerging.” With a clear concept, a disciplined construction language and a sustainability framework rooted in precision, not compromise, he represents a new kind of African design leadership one that is both visionary and operationally sound.


George Eshun is not merely “one to watch.” He is executing like a designer with a scalable model, high-level craft, editorial presence, and real market traction positioning Geovante for serious international growth as the global industry continues to prioritise circular design and responsible luxury.

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