Fashion has entered a slightly smug phase, and honestly, we love to see it. This is the era where doing the most is no longer the flex, and taste has quietly reclaimed the crown. The girls holding our attention right now aren’t scrambling for trends or reinventing themselves every week. They’re dressing with intention, repeating silhouettes unapologetically, and building fashion identities that feel personal, lived-in, and confident.
These aren’t “new” girls in the sense of fresh faces trying to break in. Some of them have been here, evolving, refining, sharpening their point of view. What’s changed is how clearly their style speaks now. You recognise them before you read the caption. You know the mood before you clock the label. And you trust that whatever they’re wearing, there’s thought behind it. These are the fashion girls currently on our radar, and not by accident.
Kiky Festus


Kiky Festus is in her fashion self-discovery era, and it’s actually one of the most interesting places to be. Rather than locking herself into a rigid aesthetic, she’s experimenting, trying silhouettes, moods, and expressions that feel exploratory and honest.
One moment it’s soft, romantic, and feminine; the next it’s sharper, more playful, slightly unexpected. What makes the journey compelling is that it feels real. There’s no rush to arrive at a final version. She’s figuring it out in public, and inviting her audience along for the ride.
Her widely talked-about Parisian proposal and traditional introduction ceremony with Akin Faminu in 2025 didn’t suddenly “define” her style, it amplified the evolution already happening.
Hawa Magaji


Hawa Magaji’s fashion sense is playful, bold, and delightfully relatable. She’s the kind of girl whose outfits make you pause and think, I could actually wear this and still look good doing it.
A content creator, TV host, and event host , Hawa leans into cute dresses, elevated everyday wear, and joyful colour palettes that feel easy rather than intimidating. Her looks never feel overworked. They feel worn, enjoyed, lived in. Hawa dresses like someone having fun with fashion, and that joy is contagious.
Angel Obasi


Angel Obasi does not dress casually. And by that, we don’t mean overdressed, we mean intentional. Often referred to as the style connoisseur, Angel treats fashion like composition. Every choice feels deliberate. Every look feels edited.
Her hats are almost as famous as she is. Everyone has noticed. Street-style photographers zoom in when she walks past. And suddenly, one accessory has become her calling card. She pairs classic boubous with sharply tailored coats, heritage silhouettes with modern structure, and somehow makes restraint feel dramatic. There’s a softness to her boldness. Angel doesn’t shout for attention; she lets the details do the talking.
Eni Popoola


Eni Popoola’s style feels like a calm presence in an otherwise frantic fashion space. Known online as Enigivensunday, her fashion journey began with documenting Sunday church outfits and has since grown into a beautifully curated archive of femininity, ease, and intention.
Clean tailoring, soft silhouettes, thoughtful beauty choices—nothing feels rushed or performative. A Harvard graduate and former middle-school history teacher, Eni brings intelligence to fashion without turning it into a lecture. Her clothes feel reflective, personal, and quietly confident.
Chinyere Adogu


Chinyere Adogu understands that fashion influence doesn’t stop at outfits—it extends into ownership. Brooklyn-born and Nigerian, Chi has been building her presence on the New York fashion scene since 2017 with a style that’s polished, confident, and globally aware.
Her looks are structured and feminine, often tailored for movement—outfits that travel well and photograph even better. But beyond personal style, Chi is also the founder of Chi’s Luxe Braiding Hair, seamlessly blending beauty entrepreneurship with fashion storytelling.
She represents a class of fashion girls who aren’t just wearing the clothes they’re building businesses, platforms, and legacies alongside their wardrobes. And honestly? That combination always deserves attention.
Frilancy Hoyle

Frilancy Hoyle dresses like colour is a personality trait. The Zambian-born, U.S.-based blogger and founder of Rabecca Onassis Boutique in Seattle is unapologetic about bold hues, expressive textures, and statement styling—and somehow, it always feels intentional.
While not Nigerian, she consistently champions Nigerian designers with genuine enthusiasm, not as a trend but as part of her fashion language. Her style is fearless but controlled, loud without being chaotic. Statement hair, strong accessories, confident silhouettes—Frilancy understands how to balance drama with polish. She’s proof that fashion can be expressive, global, and still deeply thoughtful.
Nonye Udeogu (This Thing Called Fashion)


Nonye Udeogu is for the girls who understand that sexy doesn’t need to shout. An Economics graduate turned fashion consultant and content creator, her style lives comfortably between sensual and sophisticated.
Clean cuts, flattering silhouettes, and a confident stillness define her wardrobe. She understands the power of editing—knowing when to stop, when to simplify, and when to let the outfit breathe. Through her platform, This Thing Called Fashion, Nonye has built a recognisable aesthetic rooted in consistency. She knows her lane, stays in it, and somehow keeps making it interesting. That discipline? Very chic.
Olivia Arukwe


If there’s one thing Olivia Arukwe loves and understands deeply, it’s accessories. Bags, shoes, statement earrings: she treats them not as afterthoughts, but as the main event. Her looks often feel like a masterclass in finishing touches, where the accessories do half the talking. With a background in engineering and further studies in fashion marketing in Paris, Olivia approaches fashion with both creativity and strategy. Since beginning content creation in 2019, her style has evolved into something structured, edgy, and playful. Olivia dresses like someone who enjoys a little tension in her look—and knows exactly how to resolve it.
Kene Okonkwo
Kene Okonkwo’s fashion voice extends beyond her wardrobe. Through Anikela, her blog, she offers a modern eye on female fashion in Africa—observant, thoughtful, and refreshingly current. It’s not about chasing trends; it’s about paying attention.
Her personal style mirrors that same sensibility: clean, modern, intuitive. Kene dresses like someone who’s thinking—not just about clothes, but about context, culture, and continuity. Between her brand and her visuals, she’s building a fashion presence rooted in reflection rather than noise.
She feels like someone quietly shaping conversations, not rushing to dominate them. And those are often the most interesting fashion girls to watch.