Gele
An elaborately tied, structured head-tie worn by Yoruba women, folded and sculpted into striking architectural shapes: a genuine skill, often paid for as a service in its own right.
Does your family know it this way?
The names it answers to
- GeleYoruba
MEANING
The height and complexity of a gele can signal how important the occasion is; a towering, precisely folded gele at a wedding is a form of visible respect for the celebration.
Professional gele tiers ("aso ebi" stylists) are a real trade, and a well-tied gele is admired the way a well-cut suit might be elsewhere.
Meanings are plural by design: your family may hold another. Dispute or add below; disagreement is recorded, never erased.
Colour, pattern & material
When it is worn
Who wears it, and may I?
Yoruba women, and increasingly worn as celebratory formal wear across West Africa and its diaspora more broadly.
How it is worn
- 1
The fold
A long piece of stiff fabric is folded, wrapped, and pleated into a structured shape, often with a fan or peak, secured with pins.
Who wears this
Provenance
- generated: 2026-07-10
- source: Model-knowledge aggregation pass (2026-07-10); unverified, awaiting community affirmation.
This entry is a hypothesis awaiting its people. If your family holds or wears this differently, that difference is exactly what we want recorded.
Nearby in the library
Isicholo
A large, wide-brimmed hat woven from grass and cotton, dyed a deep red-brown, worn by married Zulu women: one of the most recognisable silhouettes in Southern African dress.
🇿🇦Zulu
Doek
A headwrap tied from a square of fabric, worn daily and for ceremony across South African communities, its knot style and fabric choice carrying its own small vocabulary.
🇿🇦South Africans · Xhosa · Zulu
Kofia
A brimless, flat-topped cap, often intricately embroidered in white-on-white or gold thread, worn by Swahili Coast Muslim men for prayer and formal occasions.
🇰🇪 🇹🇿 🇲🇿 🇰🇲 🇳🇬Swahili Coast · Muslim communities of Africa