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Tuesday 15 May 2012

CNN's Inside Africa Features Nigeria’s Wedding Craze

Read some of what they said below...and then share your thoughts
Weddings in Nigeria are colorful, creative and extravagant productions, with guest lists of up to 2,000 people considered standard.
“In England, if you had 400 people at a wedding, that would be considered a huge number,” bridalwear and couture designer Yemi Osunkoya said.
“In Nigeria, if you had 400 guests, people would say ‘Oh, dear,’ ” he continues. “The more (people) you have there, the more friends it seems you have.”
Interesting. Continue reading...



Osunkoya should know. With his wedding gowns highly sought-after by Nigerian brides, he attends about 15 of his clients’ weddings in Nigeria each year, and his London-based label, Kosibah, is at the heart of that country’s booming wedding industry. Last month, it was one of 129 businesses exhibiting at Lagos’  Wed Expo Exhibition, which drew 10,000 attendees over two days.

“I would say weddings are one of the fastest growing industries in Nigeria right now,” said the event’s organizer, Akin Eso. “A lot of people term it that they’re ‘going into events’ — but the money is really in the wedding industry.”

The publisher of Wed magazine, a wedding-focused title that launched in Nigeria last year, Eso said the typical Nigerian wedding has evolved in recent years into a high-concept “production.”
“There’s always been this joy around weddings, but now there’s also this whole creativity: It’s more like a production, and nobody knows where it’s going to stop,” he said. “People just imagine it and make it happen.”

Themes such as a “snow wedding” would involve decorating the entire hall to match the concept, he said.
“Ten years back, you would normally do all the arrangements for the wedding yourself or with your friend,” he said. “Now, for every aspect of the wedding there’s a vendor that can help you.”
The trend has been driven by the many young Nigerians living overseas, who had introduced ambitious ideas for wedding themes, along with the concept of the wedding planner: a professional event organizer who could realize the happy couple’s vision for their big day, typically at their parents’ expense.
Osunkoya said families typically put much effort and expense into the event, as a wedding was an important status symbol — although “not in a negative way.”

“It’s showing how well you’ve done, and for the bride and groom, this is their time,” he said.
“Most times in Nigeria, the parents take care of the wedding — and there are many weddings where it’s just a blank check,” he said. “It s a thing of joy to have your children married, so most of the time, the parents want to go all out. That’s where you see total creativity.”

UK-based makeup artist Lola Ibekwe caters specifically to Nigerian weddings and has been hired by brides who fly her, all expenses paid, to Nigeria for their weddings.
She said, “Nigerian brides really know what they want and demand the very best. Some of them have been influenced by the big weddings of Hollywood stars and don’t mind spending big to achieve the perfect look on their big day. Most of the brides I work with reserve a big part of their budget for makeup because the pictures will last a lifetime.”


There are two parts to a Nigerian wedding, Osunkoya explained. The first ceremony was the “traditional wedding,” sometimes also referred to as the engagement. This was typically attended by fewer guests — only family and close friends — and may be held in area that one of the couple originally hailed from.
The couple would wear traditional dress, with the bride usually wearing a traditional fabric gifted to her by her new parents-in-law, sometimes sewn into a modern Afrocentric design.

The second, “white wedding” — with a guest list at the reception potentially running into the thousands — could follow days or even months later. For this, the bride would wear a white bridal gown and the bridal party formal attire. The most popular time of year for weddings was in December, when expatriate Nigerians return from abroad and can face a schedule of weddings seven days a week.

Another distinctive feature of the Nigerian wedding was the wearing of “aso-ebi.” The phrase, which translates from the Yoruba language as “clothes of the family,” refers to the garments of matching fabric worn by the bride’s family and friends at the ceremony.

“You’ve got 2,000 people there, so it’s a way of spotting people you’re meant to be with,” said Osunkoya. Although, in recent years, it is not uncommon to see the entire party wearing the aso-ebi.
While there are occasional grumbles that the trend for elaborate weddings had gone too far, nobody seems to mind on the day. “Not everyone is equal or has access to the same amount of wealth, but everyone aspires to it,” Osunkoya said.

69 comments:

Anonymous said...

Too much pictures covering the main story.. I can't see what i'm reading..

Eefy said...

Please why is this nonsense picture used? igbo people dont know how to throw a correct wedding na. Why didnt you use Yoruba or Benin wedding pictures?

Anonymous said...

True talk joor www.9janewsmag.com

Anonymous said...

really? make i read all dis wan dis night? linda wait make i first sleep lol

Anonymous said...

seriosly at 1st anon.Yoruba wedding with aso ebi everywhere all dose heavy lace.Eyin mama esenpe esenpe

Anonymous said...

Linda you are on a roll. I kinda agree with Ify, Yourba or beni pictures show a clearer picture of the festitities

mary gift said...

I love weddings but hardly attend any its great and also that is the only time u celebrate urself as a person, and also no everybody gets to see their day,

Anonymous said...

Eefy, chai... you no try oh. Now running for fanta and popcorn to watch the retinue of comments.

BLOGLORD said...

any summarization to this piece???
ok am not reading thru it but all i'll say based on the title n a few lines read is...
cnn leave people to do their owambe o! 1000 guest, 20, 1million, na thier leg them take reach there. if they see food chop, their luck, if dem no see, anywhere belle face them go.

mary gift said...

Not everybody sees such a great day, some are lucky while some odas are not, linda am serious u really need to work on ur blog can't comment easily as before too many people abey, don't feel to fly oooo ...

Anonymous said...

What do you know about Igbo wedding? Yes, Yorubas are party people, you can't take that away from them, but not Benin. Benin people comes first when it comes to juju things.

Anonymous said...

All hail Naija!!!!!!!!!

Sasha Fierce! said...

A girl saw her IGBO Lover withdrawing money from ATM,She quickly compose an SMS and send to him.
"If you are sleeping,send me your DREAMS;
If you are laughing, send me your LAUGHTER;
If you are eating, send me your FOOD;
If you are crying send me your TEARS;
If you are using your ATM, send me the MONEY".

The Igbo guy replied " I DEY SHIT"

Marcus said...

Na dem sabi.Anytime am going to do my wedding, it's going to be a private affair.Its so sad the way ladies push guys into borrowing just to wed.This is scary and causing a lot of eligible bachelors to shy away from marriage.The cost of engagement ring,bride price,traditional wedding,church wedding etc.... I better go and become a politician!

Anonymous said...

We are in the news again for the wrong reason! The write up is an embarrasment and Nigerians should bury their faces in it! Nations both developing and developed are struggling to improve their economies in these hard times by being productive while we sit here and a few of the rich splash billions(mostly stolen) on ridiculous weddings that hardly last a year! SMH

OnileEre! said...

Congrats. You've just started a tribal war

Anonymous said...

ffy dont worry when cnn wants to do a cverage about shocking divorce rate in nigerian marriages then we can use yoruba pictures cus that will tell the story better.

Anonymous said...

u need an optician mumu

Anonymous said...

@anonynous 1.03, then u have never seen a benin wedding.get ur facts right!

Anonymous said...

I am Nneka
Nobody throws a party like the Yoruba, block the street today, drink garri 2mrw.the most colourful trad weddin goes to akwa ibom or calabar,I love their culture.Hausa will throw 7days wedding dats quite boring

Anonymous said...

And what is their business with how we do our wedding.

Is it our fault that they don't have marriage life and nice parties for their wedding?

Abeg....CNN, leave us with our wedding....

That is how we do it, and because we don#'t do it like in the western world does not make yours better than ours...

Anonymous said...

Na wa oh!@Anon 1:03 - juju things haf enta d mata so oh!

Anonymous said...

Hope ur not as daft as ur comment! I thought the topic was Nigerian weddings, bigots like u are the bane of this society

pinc said...

Oh?

Pinc said...

Linda pls post my comment

j said...

If only People realized that the celebration cant go on for more than 3 days
and spend much more time planning their MARRIAGE instead of planning their WEDDINGS
until that happens all this madness about divorce and infidelity will reduce
God knows I am sick of hearing that marriages less than a year old have hit the rocks
Nigerians stop being materialistic
this isnt something to be proud about
now CNN is showcasing our shallow-ness.
Nigerians stop celebrating SHIT!!!

Sherif O S said...

You know in nigeria we like to 'show alot' let everybody know they are doing something and so particular about the 'once in a lifetime syndrome'.

Anonymous said...

who is that illiterate "anonymous 1.03am"? obviously has never been to a benin wedding. yoruba people just make a lot of noise, no substance!!!

I am, the no Sender. said...

Weddings are part of our cultural make up as a people. Whether you be Igbo, Yoruba or Hausa weddings are serious business.

My only take and I agree with a comment earlier that more preparation is given to the wedding than the marriage.

I do know that some couple go broke after their wedding and wahala enters into the marriage. My opinion is make your dress according to the cloth you have.

As for wedding parties. Abeg, I gbadun yoruba weddings o! Kai they can be generous with food and the meat dey big. As for Igbo parties? They can look face well when dem dey serve food and drinks. If you no sabi person na emergecy fasting be that. Benin? Never been priviledged to attend any yet.

Anonymous said...

the anon who placed the reply is a douche! Idiot...did you have to abuse that person? Well mr poster. Obviously U̶̲̥̅̊ r using your fone browser. Just download opera mini and open the blog from there. You should be fine.

Ada said...

@ Eefy....wat sort of pornstar name is dat....u re such a racist...am pretty sure u fall in d category of those to borrow money to throw a lavish wedding only to soak garri afterwards.....mscewwww

Anonymous said...

Lmaoo!!! I think u should become a comedian

Anonymous said...

Weddings are suppose to be a private affair. Mine had 250 guests , and i still think its was a huge crowd, since we both wanted 150 guest. The wedding was spectaular and all the guest were pampered to the full. "The rest of the world" can view the pics and videos . SIMPLE

Anonymous said...

Lolzzz d yap pain u no bi small.

LALICIOUS said...

Dis popcorn tin Ȋ̝̊̅§ stale,,if evry1 Ȋ̝̊̅§ takin popcorn who will comment? Mschewwwwwwwwwww!!!!! Pass d mic jor.....

Anonymous said...

Who b ds Eefy?did I hear u say ibo weddin nor D̶̲̥̅̊ε̲̣̣̣y mk sense?I see u r blind.wot do u even ₪ø abt colours sef?mtcheeeeeeww mind yasef

Anonymous said...

@Ada plz tell him .outdated humanbin

Anonymous said...

I agree with what j said, people hold lavish weddings and dont know how to marry well, at the end of the day the people that attended the wedding will quickly forget-looking for the next wedding to go to! What is the point blowing too much money on one day, and not invest wisely in your marriage?

TWE (Thé White Enchantress) said...

the main topic of discussion have been thrown aside and tribal resentments and aggression is on full display

Anonymous said...

He said pictures are covering the story. We all don't read or operate from the same type of phone or system. I think calling him names or insulting him is uncalled for. Let's be civil for once.

Anonymous said...

You igbos can D̶̲̥̅̊ε̲̣̣̣̥γ̲̣̣̥ quick vex when pesn yab una....but una D̶̲̥̅̊ε̲̣̣̣̥γ̲̣̣̥ like to yab people where e go pain them. Yeye get body odor. Abeg run go petrol station shuck one hose for mouth joor, then smoke cigar immediately. And no....I'm not efiy

Anonymous said...

Ewu, Anuofia mmuo. Udele, it's goats like you that go borrowing to wed and come home to starve to death. Must you attend an Ibo wedding? Pls go and brush your mouth and stop spiting all over the place.

Anonymous said...

@anonymous 5:24, thanks for replying that mumu

Anonymous said...

For those of you that said they should have used Yoruba pic, don't worry CNN will do that whenever they want to talk about, birthday,Naming ceremony,celebrate today and drink garri tomorrow or even divorce in Nigeria they will use yoruba pics hun make una no worry.

LALICIOUS said...

Lmao...@ soakin garri after weddin.....
I had more than 1500 peeps at my weddin,,yeah we spent a lot bt nt all was 4rm our pocket
My hubby had commitee of frnds,,,Чυя frnds comin 2gather 2 help raise money 4 whiteweddin jst as it Ȋ̝̊̅§ done durin elections
We den added some more(alot shaa) 2 meet up wif d budget
Den on d weddin day,our Fam nd frnds still sprayed us heavily nd who also received lots of gifts....we dnt feel d expenses after d weddin
Well dats hw I did mine dnt kno of odas#okbye

wini syno speaks said...

wow and a Benin witch is talking, u unlettered fellow Eefy or Efo the issue hear is Nigerian wedding and u are talking crap. Benin is known for their witch craft ok. lol @ block the street today soak garri tomorrow

doll (retired blogger) said...

if we probably paid a lot more attention to planning the marriage than the day, maybe more marriages would last and people would shine their eyes more and stop settling just because they want the fanfare of one day.


By all means spend the money if you have it, but when you see comments like "Stephanie has raised the bar" or you must outdo this one, or outshine this one, you can't hekp but shake your head.

Anonymous said...

u hav confirmed dat ur a confused person, evry tribe hav dia own juju aspect so dnt cm here babdash rubbish, yes Benin ppl hav colorful traditional weddings cz d coral beads re mad, im engaged to a Benin guy so dnt annoy me oooo wid ur comment 'tongue out'

I am, the no Sender. said...

lolllll lwkmd.

Anonymous said...

@anon 5:07, I totally agree wit you. When CNN wants to cover the high rate of divorce, deported/arrested Nigerians, train and public toilet cleaners (in the uk) they most def will be using yoruba pictures and names,lmao.

Anon 1:03, do you really think your part of Naij is the best. mtchwwww wake up

Saniti said...

It's like I'm the only Nigerian that doesn't want a big wedding. I don't even want the white dress/ bridesmaid bruhaha... Registry will do. Now if we make it past ten years. Mayb just mayb we can then do it owanmbe style.lol

BabyLaw said...

To the person who talked about Yoruba people divorce rate being higher than most, please check again. There are no tribal lines with divorce anymore. Our young naija people have become highly intolerant and fast paced. They are not ready to endure or "suffer" as I hear it. All tribes, cultures, town, villages now divorce at the drop of a hat. The lowest rate of divorce right now is amongst northern muslims but trust me all other tribes are divorcing at an alarming rate

Anonymous said...

What's wrong with these oyinbo pple sef? Must everything be done their way? We have culture, so our wedding must be done accordingly.

Talking of divorce rate, they will carry first for that one. They should gerraout joor. CNN ko LTV ni. *eyesrolling*

DireDayo

Anonymous said...

What's wrong with these oyinbo pple sef? Must everything be done their way? We have culture, so our wedding must be done accordingly.

Talking of divorce rate, they will carry first for that one. They should gerraout joor. CNN ko LTV ni. *eyesrolling*

DireDayo

Anonymous said...

CNN is running out of gist.

Ajamu Nangwaya said...

Is this (spending money on weddings) the best way for our people to use scarce resources?

Wouldn't it be better to put that money into productive activities or give the money to human rights or community development organizations that are working for the public good?

Our people are a tad bit clueless when it comes to wealth creation (productive activities) or using money for non-consumptive purposes...just look at how we consume all over the Pan-Afrikan world.

Proud Benin Girl said...

you are out of ur mind to insult benin people when u av a baseless tradition! i rest my case in the joy that you cannot face a benin person and trash their tradition and leave wt your face the same!!! Ewiaaa!!!! Go and eat worm!!!

Nigerian Recruitment said...

@Nneka:Thank You,i like peole who are realistic with their comments.

Adeyemi Idris said...

Linda! Na u dey reign o.... Lwkmd with some comments here.say Person wey no get kudi or sabi ppl 4 igbo ppl party go opt 4 emergency fasting. Lol

Anonymous said...

Mtcheew! Yoruba wedding this, benin wedding that. What would you now say about efik wedding? I'm not efik, but there's no occasion as beautiful, regal and captivating as their traditional marriage.

nike said...

Make una no yab yoruba again ooooo...abi au many yoruba ppl don beg una 4 money b4 after weddin...see beef....i go even get 1million ppl 4my weddin...broke ass ppl pls stop bad mouthin yoruba ppl...we r nigerians so we dnt ve to conform to any dirty british standard...Marriage scata weida big or small so pls dumb mumus,d size ha notin to d wiv d underlyin p...

Anonymous said...

hausa weddings are never ever for a week but just 3 or 4 days and even if so, the weddings are always beautiful and more colourful than that picture......

Anonymous said...

U r an idiot. What does that have to do with weddings?

Anonymous said...

U got my Igbo folks am point! Its just true !! Lol

Anonymous said...

U got my Igbo folks am point! Its just true !! Lol

Adeyemi Idris said...

Nawa 4 u o linda...u no post my comment. Y now!

Anonymous said...

Racist??? U mean tribalist???

Str8FrmDaHips said...

CNN go park joor!!..una Royal Wedding and Hollywood weddings nkor??..Its the way we are..yeah most times its OTT..but who's to argue about how people chose to spend their money..as long as they don't come knocking on my door..Personally 200 is enough..
I know a few Indians and trust me they spend a fortune..all paid for by the Bride's family!!

Anonymous said...

Efik weddings are truly regal,rich, colourful and highly representative of their culture!
Attend an efik wedding and ya'll will see.
To be honest we musn't conform to British culture(or lack thereof) for our weddings but the extravagant weddings we have compared to the poverty level in our country is alarming and quite true with the Yoruba.

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