Archive for the 'Mozambique' Category

Mozambique Fashion Week ads

Monday, June 21st, 2010

Parading in high heels is nothing for those who balance a bowl on their head.

Discover the Africa you can’t see on National Geographic.

The African culture is on the streets, in museums, history books and in wardrobes.

African fashion brings back what the apartheid abolished: harmony between colors.

You can talk about Africa, long legs and beauty without necessarily referring to a giraffe.

Fashion found out something that society should already know: no one color is better than another.

The Mozambique Fashion Week ads where created by DDB Mozambique via adsoftheworld


Imagining Mozambique – Poster

Friday, January 8th, 2010

Thanks for getting in touch, Happycentro created this interesting poster (Mozambique Toy Soldier Typography) for the charity Imagining Mozambique.

Rational
Interested in the project and knowing too little about the issue of Mozambique, the first thing I did, I always do so, I entered into a search engine that word. It is interesting how a so superficial approach sometimes suggests effective initiatives. Of all the information I have gathered, in the end I have been impressed that the first words you read on the Wikipedia entry Mozambique are: from 1977 to 1992 the country was traversed by a long civil war. I was born in 1977 and I remember very well my 1992. It is difficult to dive into the reality of a childhood lived in the middle of a bloody conflict. Many small lives that has been denied the right of the game. I imagined a country torn apart, I thought of something like that for me the war was only a game. I thought of the soldiers who, abandoning their shape, piled one over, tell us a bit of recent history of humanity.

Mozambique coat of arms

Saturday, December 5th, 2009

Mozambique_Coat_of_Arms

Mozambique coat of arms via flagshag.com

Mozambique t-shirt

Monday, March 30th, 2009

mosambiquestatattak.com are behind various t-shirts taking inspiration from countrys in Africa and their statistics. 20% of the money from the sale of the shirts go towards building an orphanage in Mozambique.