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photography | Zikoko!
  • #NairaLife: A Rough Patch Pushed Him Into Photography. Now, He’s Juggling It With a 9–5

    Every week, Zikoko seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it’ll be revealing.


    “Do crypto with Quidax and win from a $60K QDX prize pool!” Bayo, a 28-year-old Lagosian tells Jide, his Ibadan friend seeking the most secure way to trade crypto in Nigeria after a major exchange he trades with announced its plans to leave the country. Find out more here.


    NairaLife #267 bio

    What’s your earliest memory of money?

    I must’ve been around three years old when my elder brother was resuming Nursery 3. He was reluctant to start the new class because everyone thought the class teacher was mean. So, my cousin promised to give him 50 kobo if he went to the class without making a fuss. It worked; my brother stopped complaining. 

    It was my first time realising money could insulate someone from certain experiences. Or at least, make the experience better. I became more convinced of that when I got into primary school.

    How so?

    My mum never gave me lunch money; I went to school with home-cooked meals. Other kids had money to buy stuff during break. They looked like they were balling, and I wanted that lifestyle. I knew I needed money to make that happen. So, I started a mini-rental business in Primary 3.

    My elder brother was good at sketching storybooks. Whenever he made new ones, I’d lease them out to my classmates for ₦5 or ₦10. What I made went into sweets, sugar cane and snacks. I was finally balling like my mates, and I loved it.

    What was the financial situation at home like?

    It mostly depended on my dad’s job. He was a geologist who did several stints at private oil companies throughout my childhood. When he worked at a good place, there was money. But when he didn’t, we struggled. My mum’s tailor income couldn’t do much for five children.

    One of the times we really struggled was when my dad lost a job as I was about to start SS 1. I had to stay home for weeks because he couldn’t pay my fees. 

    He got a new job a few months later, and things returned to normal. I never forgot that period, though. I noticed how trying to hold the family finances together stretched my mum. That’s when I started associating having good money with having a job. But interestingly, my parents didn’t allow us to work while in university — they were against whatever business my siblings tried their hands at. It was always, “Go to school and get a certificate”.  

    Did you try a business in uni too?

    There was no point. I lived on allowances. I got into university in 2013 and was on a ₦40k monthly allowance right from the first year. In 2016 — my third year at uni — my allowance increased to ₦80k, then there was the extra ₦15k – ₦20k from my mum. 

    My dad lost his job that same year, thanks to Buhari. That man came and introduced policies that affected oil prospecting companies, and the whole sector became unstable. Even when my dad found another job, he had to take a nasty pay cut. I think he went from earning about ₦600k in allowances alone to an ₦100k salary. Of course, it meant he could no longer fund my lifestyle. 

    What were some of the changes you had to make?

    I was a baller before my dad lost his job. I lived in a two-bedroom apartment my dad paid for and used to host house parties once a month. I also regularly bought food for my friends and splurged on gadgets and expensive shoes. In 2016, you could get good Nike shoes for like ₦20k.

    However, when my dad lost his job, I became totally broke. In fact, the right word is poverty. I didn’t have any savings, and my allowance dropped from ₦80k to ₦12k to anything I got. I moved into a self-contained apartment and started missing meals. Obviously, the parties stopped. I suddenly became the “I don’t have money” friend.

    Thankfully, this was close to a compulsory six-month internship period, so I left school for another town where the internship was. 

    Were you paid a stipend at the internship?

    Nope. It was unpaid. I stayed with an uncle, so feeding and accommodation were sorted. But I wasn’t comfortable with not having money. 

    About three months into the internship, I was with a photographer friend’s phone when a ₦100k credit notification popped up. He saw the message and was like, “Oh, this person has paid their balance”. I asked what the balance was for, and he said a photoshoot. I was shocked. How much was the full amount if the “balance” was ₦100k? I decided there and then I could take pictures too. 

    LMAO

    This was in 2017. My friend hooked me up with someone who owned a studio, and I started hanging around him to learn the photography business. After a month, I ditched my internship to focus on photography. I got a job at a studio — after forming like I knew what I was doing — and got paid ₦28k/month. I started as a photography assistant, but I was pretty much a full-time photographer.

    At this point, I’d stopped calling home for money because the answer was always the same — there was no money. I was fully in hustle mode. I worked Sunday to Sunday — it was stressful as hell — but it felt good to earn my own money. I also made extra money on the side assisting other photographers and taking pictures on my own. These, plus my salary, usually brought my income to ₦50k monthly on average.

    I should mention that I didn’t tell my boss I was still in school. I thought it’d spoil my chances. I only told him when I had to return to school in February 2018. I’d worked for about seven months in total and saved most of my income, so I used it to sort my school fees and the ₦90k rent for my self-contained apartment.

    Did you continue with photography in school?

    Yes. The friend who introduced me to photography was in my university too, and he had a studio in a nearby town. I’d gotten a number of clients from my time assisting photographers, so I still got gigs. 

    It was that time when everyone was doing model shoots and polaroids. Whenever I got clients, I’d use my friend’s studio and fuel his generator as appreciation for using his space. I usually made like ₦20k – ₦30k per shoot. I also set up an Instagram page for my pictures and became a mini-celebrity in school. I had photography jobs almost every weekend.

    How much did that bring you in a month?

    Between ₦30k – ₦50k. 

    I graduated uni in October 2018 and returned to the studio I worked at during IT. This time, my pay was ₦35k, and I worked for five months before I went for NYSC.

    I chose a photography studio for my PPA, and they paid me ₦50k/month in addition to NYSC’s ₦19,800 allowance. I also joined the media department of a church and had access to their camera, which was useful for my side gigs, bringing in an extra ₦20k here and ₦30k there. During my NYSC year, I was averaging around ₦120k/month.

    Not bad.

    In January 2020, I got a ₦150k product shoot gig for someone’s website. Until that time, it was the most money I’d ever made from a single photography job, and I felt like I’d finally made it. It also sparked my interest in documentary photography. I love telling stories and had even written briefly at one point. I figured documentaries would let me combine storytelling with photography. I didn’t know many documentary photographers, but if I could learn it, I would stop taking portraits and covering events — I’ve always found the latter stressful. 

    Then, COVID lockdown happened immediately after I finished NYSC, and I couldn’t even find the events jobs I didn’t like. The studio I worked at also closed down, and they never reopened even after the lockdown was lifted.

    Damn. So, no gigs and no salary

    It was brutal. Thankfully, I went back to living with my uncle after university, so I wasn’t homeless. I didn’t have any savings, though. When people started coming out again after lockdown, I decided to focus on freelance photography rather than keeping a studio job. I realised I could make more money that way.

    So, I started taking on a few jobs here and there, including corporate headshots for organisations. One thing I did was make sure to charge well — my rates were from ₦100k. I knew I did great work, and I wasn’t afraid to call money. At least, if I did only one job a month, it’d be something. Of course, there were months I didn’t see anything.

    I also had a two-month stint teaching students at an academy. The organisers paid me ₦20k/month per student, and there were 10 students, making ₦400k for the two months.

    Did you still pursue documentary photography?

    Oh, yes. I applied to quite a number of brands, offering to make documentaries for them, but nothing came out of that.

    Towards the end of 2020, I decided I’d lived with my uncle long enough. So, I moved into a two-bedroom apartment with a friend from school. The cost was ₦800k, and I contributed half of the bill.

    In 2021, I partnered with a photographer friend who had an abandoned studio, and he allowed me to run it. There was equipment there and everything— I just had to sit down there. I even had an office like a proper big boy. It didn’t come with additional income sha. My clients were still mostly from my freelancing gigs, and I averaged around ₦200k – ₦400k monthly. 

    Then, in 2022, I got a job with an international NGO.

    How did that happen?

    A friend randomly shared the vacancy with me and asked if I was interested. It was a communications intern role, and I thought, “Well, let me try”. It was my first 9-5 job, and it paid ₦130k/month.

    I didn’t stop photography, though. A few months into the job, a colleague noticed I took really good pictures for my reports and introduced me to a one-time project that involved covering photography for an NGO event. That paid ₦400k.

    My job also involved a lot of travel, which translated to additional per diem allowances. That usually brought in an additional ₦100k every other month. There was also health insurance and other small benefits. I kept thinking, so this is what 9-5 people have been enjoying?

    What was having two incomes like?

    It was great. I was finally able to save up to buy my own camera. I’d been using my church’s camera and borrowing from friends until that point. It was a Sony Alpha 7 III, and it cost me ₦1.3m. I still use that camera today.

    My roommate moved out at a point, and he owned most of the appliances. But I was able to re-furnish my apartment with a new TV, couch, air conditioner and a few other things. Generally, I felt like I was finally setting up my life. I hadn’t called home for money in forever, and I was living well.

    I also finally landed a documentary gig in December 2020. An organisation I’d previously worked with said they wanted to produce infographic video content in five different languages. I randomly charged ₦1.8 million for a three-minute video, and they agreed. I bought myself a Macbook Pro after the project ended because why not?

    [ad]

    How was the internship at the NGO going?

    It was initially for six months, but it got extended to a year. After the year ended, there was an opportunity for me to apply to become a regular communications officer, but I didn’t get the role. I could’ve renewed my internship, but I was angry that I didn’t get the regular role, so I left in March 2023.

    Back to freelance photography?

    Yes. However, I also became a subcontractor for the NGO. I’d left some projects unfinished and some decision-makers thought I should be the one to do it. I even made more money that way. I did about five gigs for them within seven months, and each paid between ₦100k and ₦200k.

    However, I still wanted a 9-5. I’d tasted how the other side lived, and I liked it. So, I applied and got a communications officer role with another NGO in September 2023. My salary was ₦469k/month. I was back to balling levels.

    Love to hear it.

    It also involved a lot of travel. I could be on the road for three weeks in a month, and with per diem allowances, my monthly income came to around ₦800k. The only downside was I no longer had so much time for photography side gigs.

    Interestingly, I found out after about four months of working at the NGO that I was like the least-paid person there. Someone else on my level was earning ₦1.4m.

    AH. How did that happen?

    I asked HR, and it turns out I wasn’t supposed to accept the first offer I was given. I had no idea I could negotiate. It really affected my morale, but shit happens. My salary was slightly reviewed to ₦600k, and I had to take it like that.

    I’m still at the NGO. With travel allowances running into ₦350k – ₦400k, my income from my 9-5 runs into ₦1m monthly. Then, an added ₦350k – ₦400k approximately from photography — mostly portraits and documentaries.

    I’m actively on the job market, sha. I’m hoping to land a managerial role and make more money.

    What’s an ideal amount you think you should be earning?

    If I were to change jobs now, I’d hope to earn nothing less than ₦1.6m – ₦1.8m/month. But comfortable money for me right now would be $9k – $10k/month, and I think I should be able to achieve that within three to four years if I stay on my current career course or expand my photography clientele.

    How would you describe your relationship with money?

    Money is a means to an end. I want to live a life without stress, and I know money is what can give me that lifestyle. So, I don’t hoard money. The moment I get it, I’m thinking of things that money can facilitate for me or how it can make my life easier.

    I hardly save these days. I once put about $2k in a cryptocurrency just to have something somewhere. But I lost $1,500 out of it earlier this year when I took someone’s idea to trade it. I just removed my remaining $500 and left it in a dollar account. I recently added $1,500 to it, so it’s back to $2k now.

    I’m also not into investing because I think there’s a gap between what I’m earning now and what I want to earn, so I prefer to focus on that.

    Let’s break down your typical monthly expenses

    Nairalife #267 expenses

    Tell me about a recent unplanned expense you made

    Reebok sneakers. I move around different communities for my job regularly, and the sneakers are so comfy. I can walk around in those things all day. It cost ₦45k, and I still think it’s worth it.

    I’m curious. Do you see yourself juggling a 9-5 and photography for much longer?

    I even have construction in mind. That’s what I studied in school, and I might pivot into that when I’m around 40 years old. But I definitely plan to set up my own media organisation so I can do media and communication consultancies and work on more documentaries. That’ll probably cost around $15k. 

    For now, I like working in the development sector because it makes me feel like I’m making an impact. So, I’ll probably stick to it for a while. I also hope to japa soon, so I’m deliberately applying to foreign-based jobs.

    Is there anything you want right now but can’t afford?

    Maybe a car. But it’s more of something I have to wait for, rather than can’t afford. I have about ₦4.5m saved for it, but prices have increased, and the car I want now costs around ₦9m, so I have to gather money for that.

    How would you rate your financial happiness on a scale of 1 – 10?

    6. I’m not really happy with my finances, and I think I can do a lot better. My income seems like a lot of money because of where Nigeria is right now, but it’s really not. I’m not where I want to be financially. Maybe if I can bridge that gap and develop better money habits, that number could grow to an 8 or 9.


    If you’re interested in talking about your Naira Life story, this is a good place to start.

    Find all the past Naira Life stories here.

  • Creator Spotlight: How Lex Ash Reimagines a Better Future for Nigerian Creatives

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    My full name is Alexander Chidiebere Ashimole.

    People tried to give me different nicknames at different points in my life, but the only one that stuck was the one I gave myself — Lex Ash. I’m a photographer, but I’m also a musician. I’m relatively good at every artistic thing I’ve tried, so I’m thankful for that gift. I’m deeply spiritual, and I don’t like anything that stresses me out. When I want to relax, I watch comedy. I’m also an amala hater. I’m a gadget person, so if I had all the money in the world, I’d probably just be buying tech gadgets for the sake of it. 

    Lex, this is not a safe space for amala hate. Also, only rich people like gadgets. Do you have Starlink?

    I’ve tried amala, and it’s not worth it. I don’t know why people put themselves through that, but Nigerians voted Buhari twice, so yeah. I’m not rich o. I spent all my money on a new place, and I’ve decided that until further notice, no big purchases. But Starlink might be somewhere in my future. I don’t just spend money like that. I have to plan and think about it. 

    All I’m hearing is wealth. I’ve added you to my list of rich people

    Where did the wealth come from, please? I started by saying I don’t have any money.

    I refuse to hear about poverty. A new place in this regime? Work must be great, then

    Work isn’t going all that great, so you people should give me work. So if you guys have an opening in Zikoko, please, let me know. I do like money, so any extra source of income is welcome. Photography can be, and I hate this part of it, seasonal. Sometimes, it’s good; other times, you get worried because you don’t know when money will come again. It’s spaced out, so I don’t get a lot of jobs too frequently. So annoying. For example, there are seasons when people get married more frequently. And I think I’m one of the more expensive brands in wedding photography. Some people come to me after some of the photographers they want have been booked, a lot of people also come to me because of my style, so I’m thankful for that.

    You make it sound like you’re second choice 

    That’s usually the case. But a lot of event planners don’t refer me because they probably don’t see a lot of my wedding photography work online. I’m trying to change that. At the same time, if I don’t get photography jobs, where will I see photography pictures? Event planners have roasters of people who cover their weddings. Most times, it’s the couple who reach out to me, and they always love my work. If you know anybody who’s getting married, or ageing up and has money as well, please tell them I’m available. 

    What’s your price range? 

    I have a base charge. I have rate cards for weddings.

    For portraits, I charge somewhere per outfit, depending on the situation. I also started creating alternative options for people with lesser budgets, we can come up with a custom price or package for you. Studio shoots are cheaper. And charging per hour doesn’t work because we Nigerians have a time problem.

    What happens when the person wears a suit, then takes off the jacket? They technically did not change the outfit

    You also get a limited amount of images per outfit. So if you’re wearing a jacket and take it off, you didn’t change the outfit, but you’re still limited to three images. I deliver three retouched images per outfit, no matter what you do to your outfits.

    How do you charge for weddings?

    I charge a day rate with extra charges for whatever service they want to add to it. If you’re going to do a pre-wedding session, an after-party, photo books and frames or if I need extra hands, those cost extra.

    Can you give me a rough estimate? What’s the highest you’ve been paid? 

    ₦4.something million for a four-day wedding. The first day was thirty minutes of work. The last day was four hours of work, but the main wedding events lasted two days.

    Wow. I didn’t know Nigerians spent money like that

    People spend as much as 200 million on weddings. Probably even more.

    Does being around all that jazz make you want to settle down?

    The weddings themselves don’t necessarily make me feel like that; there’s just the human urge to be coupled. Have you seen how stressful weddings can be? Even me, as the photographer, I know. In fact, let’s take out all the traditional wedding activities. Why do people feel the need to make sure the whole world is at their wedding, and they all have to dress up in certain weaves, aso-ebi and whatnot. I don’t like spending money like that, but if it’s my close friend, I’ll do it.

    How did you get into photography? Did you grow up with a camera?

    So remember how I said I like gadgets? I had this friend who got a camera in school. In fact, it was a camcorder, and I was just playing around with it during our science and technology week when I was randomly given the assignment to make a photography workshop happen. That was my first-ever experience in the same space with a photographer and people who are interested in photography. This is all the way back in 2011. People would see me with my friend’s camera and say, “Oh, this is nice. Take a picture of me.” And by 2013, I definitely wanted to do it for real. 

    What kind of pictures did you take at first?

    I used to do graphic design. And it was just hard to find pictures of black people to use for designs. That was my first project, manipulating, putting somebody who’s dancing in a place where there’s water flowing, for example. Or changing a person’s face to grass. Something like that, just random things.

     Do you remember your first official project?

    In 2012, my friend allowed me to borrow his camera, and we were having a trade fair in school. I was just going around taking random pictures when somebody was trying to make a decision about buying asun. So I took a picture of the asun and showed it to them, and they went, I’ll take two packs, please. The fact that the picture I took made them decide to actually buy the asun was very interesting and funny to me. Later in 2013, the pictures I took during some chapel services were used on a billboard. That was pretty cool too.

    Did they pay you for that? 

    I wasn’t even thinking of payment that time. I just made friends with the people in the Corporate Affairs Unit, and they’d let me borrow their cameras once in a while. So it was okay.

    Did that asun story prompt you to use photography to tell stories?

    Probably, but I think it was everything together. I always just loved the idea of creating images other people can connect with. From my graphic design to photography, or even when I was writing and singing in school. I always wanted people to have an emotional connection to it. But I didn’t know how that would take shape exactly. The asun incident was just one of the things I was doing to pass the time that contributed to the big idea.

    What did you study in school actually?

    I studied estate management, but that’s not what I want to be hired for. I want to be the chief marketing officer of a tech startup.

    How do you go from estate management to marketing officer?

    Estate management is about selling and evaluating landed property, and marketing is attached to it. I’ve always been big on brand building since I started doing graphic design. So all my work experience has been related to that. I worked two months in Unilever Nigeria with the internal communications team. I also worked in radio as the chair of content management. I worked in a tech company for two years before I quit in 2017 to try this photography something.

    Do you ever regret taking a bet on yourself like that?

    No, not at all. I knew it was coming. I just didn’t know when, and after I left, I was broke for a while. But I knew what was possible. This is the sixth year, and I haven’t regretted that decision one bit. I don’t miss the 9-5 life. I can’t deny that consistent income helps you plan your life and gives you something to do on a daily basis. But I don’t think I’d ever want to go back. If anything, I’d do consultancy where I choose my hours. Even now, the only reason I’m looking for a job is because my eyes have tear. I want more money. I love money. I’m trying to burn the candle from two ends. I want to get consistent money while I get photography money in a way that’s maximally efficient.

    How did you now get into music?

    I was in the choir in Covenant University. Even when I finished youth service, a church paid me to be part of their choir l. I say music was my first love. But I’m the type to double my talents like that parable from the Bible. Everyone needs an alternative source of income. At the very beginning, I had photography, but I didn’t feel like I could stand alone with it. It’s possible for you to love something, but because it’s your source of income, it becomes more stressful and challenging. So you want to find other artistic hobbies as an outlet. So I still love photography, but music started for me because my photography business had come to a point where I could explore another side of myself. 

    So with music, you want to express yourself, not earn?

    No o. I want to earn and express myself, please. Remember what I said about money and liking it? So if it can get me money, of course I’d take it. I’m looking for money. At the end of the day, please, it’s important.

    Are you earning from music yet?

    Not as much as I’d like. As much as I want to earn from it, I’m also big on doing what I love. I’m creating music, but I don’t have a label, or the financial backing is not as big as it needs to be. That’s also how my photography started, right? I was doing stuff I loved, and eventually, people came around to it. Now, people pay me a lot of money for it. Before you can make a lot of money off streaming, you need to get a million streams or something. I haven’t gotten to that point yet.

    But does photography open doors for you? 

    Yes, my photography has helped me meet some really interesting people. I’ve met Mark Zuckerberg. I’ve been able to change people’s lives. I’m thankful because I’ve mentored people who now live on their photography. I’ve been talked about in places I’ve never been because of my photography. You know, the bible says a man’s gift maketh way for him and puts him before great men. That’s my testimony.

    Hallelujah. Do you feel like you’re at the peak of your career? 

    I don’t think I’m anywhere close to up there. I think I’m, if anything, a tiny local champion — even “champion” is a strong word. I hope to be a global phenomenon, not just in photography, in everything. Photography, as much as I love it, is still a stepping stone to my bigger goals. 

    What are these goals? What does going global look like?

    I want somebody somewhere in Bangladesh to think, “I can be a great photographer” because this random guy from Nigeria did it. I want people I probably will never meet to connect with my work on a personal level. 

    I want to establish a University of the Arts in Nigeria. I don’t know how it’ll happen or how I’ll get there, but there are so many incredibly gifted people in this country who never get the opportunities they need to showcase their gifts. I hate how they may never get the chance to pursue their passion. The Grammys are big because there’s an academy of scholars who’ve studied music and the arts to the point where they’ve come together to create a conglomerate that celebrates them. The reason why we don’t have that in Nigeria is because the art world is still growing here. But also, people don’t think it’s a viable, life choice to become an artist. There are no schools people respect, like universities where you can study the arts.

    Are you doing anything to make these dreams happen yet?

    Everything I’ve done up to this point has led me here, and it’ll lead me there, if that makes sense. I don’t have a school currently, but one thing I’m trying to do in 2023 is create a mentorship program. I won’t restrict it to photographers, but they’ll be the main focus. And hopefully, this coming election will be the starting point of a new era, and we get to the point where our passports can do better, so creatives can stay or go and come as they please. 

    Here’s my final question: Why do you tell such bad dad jokes on Twitter? 

    I take offence to that. What do you mean my dad jokes are bad? First of all, I’m not a dad; it’s just a joke. Secondly, for you to call it a joke, that means it’s funny. I feel like it takes a refined mind to appreciate a good joke; bad is not a word I’d use for art. So the fact that you did not snicker at my snickers makes me doubt the bounty of your ability to imagine.

    You should stick to photography

    Who do you know that’s a better jokes person than I am?

    Honestly, if you ever do stand up? I’ll be throwing tomatoes and that shit’s expensive

    I’ll be getting vegetables, and that means I’ll be getting a balanced diet. So I don’t mind it. I’d still keep on my stand-up career.

  • Creator Spotlight: “My Culture and Queer Identity Influence My Art”

    Creator Spotlight is a weekly series celebrating young Nigerians in the creative industry doing unique things. Everyone has a story, and Zikoko wants to tell it.


    Alexandra classifies herself as a multidisciplinary artist. She is a self-taught artist, who’s into photography, makeup, styling and creative direction. She’s also a content creator and influencer on Instagram. She loves everything about beauty, fashion and lifestyle. She champions conversations around respecting plus-size women and queer people. Fun fact: she can’t stand honey.

    Which art form caught your interest first?

    My interest in the creative industry began in 2016. I had just entered university, and my mum made me learn a skill — makeup. Even though I felt lazy about it at the time, I’m grateful for that now. I ended up loving it and it became a side hustle for me in school from 2016 to 2018. I started doing collaborations and working with other creatives, and I used to call myself the collaboration queen. I did that until I graduated in 2019. At the height of COVID, I started taking pictures and editing them with my phone at home till 2021 when my parents gifted me a camera. Then I started calling myself a photographer. Since I’d had a year’s practice, I felt like I knew what I was doing, but now, I realise I was doing rubbish. But A for effort.

    Alexandra taking pictures.

    How did you convince your parents to get you a camera?

    My little brother, Zim, is a model. He became a meme when he was three, and it got him a lot of attention on Instagram in 2020. My ex used to take his pictures, but then, we fell out and having no one to do it pushed me to take photography seriously. Because of this, my parents didn’t mind getting me my first camera from the money we had made from Zim’s modelling.

    Is he easy to work with?

    He’s tough to work with because he’s a child. If you didn’t give him what he wanted, he’d throw tantrums, and when he agreed to take pictures, he’d be so angry that he made faces. Fortunately, his frowning face was his selling point. But he’s getting better as he grows. Hopefully, next year, I’ll focus more on him.

    How did you get gigs when you started?

    Even after my makeup classes in school, I kept practising until I got good and could confidently charge people like ₦1000 – 1,500 for it. People got to know me through word of mouth. My makeup was always colourful. In many ways, my identity has always influenced my art, even before I knew I was queer. I always do things differently, I would do editorial-style makeup and use graphic liners before it got popular, and that attracted people to work with me. 

    Make-up done by Alexandra.

    What was your first project?

    In 2021, I worked on my first project as a photographer to celebrate and document Nigerian queer and non-binary people. With that project, I wanted to create representation on social and mainstream media. My thought was simple; if I had seen someone doing what I did when i thought I was straight in 2018-2019, maybe I’d have realised sooner that I was queer. I wanted younger people who were struggling with their sexuality to relate to my art. I wanted them to see themselves through it.

    How come you hadn’t met any queer person before then?

    I have a lot of ambition, which blinds me to life’s romantic side. I was too busy focusing on my dreams and goals to think of a relationship, so I didn’t realize I was queer until 2019. I’d never met a queer person until I met my ex-girlfriend during a photo shoot, and it was like something clicked in my head. I also take my time photographing fat people because of fatphobia and body shaming, which I’d been a victim of all my life.  

    Should this be a “love life” conversation?

    Oh, please, that relationship didn’t last. It was less about the person and more about me coming to a realisation. 

    How did you meet queer people to work with? 

    My partner introduced me to her friends, who introduced me to their friends, and that’s how my circle widened. Social media is a big game changer too. My art also draws people. It resonates with many queer people, so that’s how I got to meet them, even though it’s hard to photograph them because of the fear of homophobia. The project eventually had to pause because of that, and I’ve taken the time to apply for grants to travel around and photograph more queer people. I haven’t received any yet. 

    Has anyone ever asked for their pictures to be taken down? 

    Of course. I get their consent beforehand, but I’ve had issues with people getting in trouble with their parents, and when they ask me to take it down, I do. It’s okay because I understand the struggle. As annoying as it can be to work on something and hide it, I know it’s not their fault, and there’s not much I can do about it. But I always tell them I’ll leave it as part of my portfolio, and they usually agree. Photography has changed my life and how I look at things. 

    How?

    I’ve achieved so much in such a short time. I wanted to get a MacBook, a new  phone and a camera, and I have. And it’s all because I took photography and NFT seriously. I’m always ready to work hard and explore as much as possible when it comes to my passion, so I can’t wait to see what happens next.

    Did you get a lot of money from creating NFTs? 

    Not a lot of money. About 600-700$. It was a lot of money to me when it came in earlier this year, but I’ve made more since, so it’s not a lot anymore. The collection was one of my first queer shoots called “Colours of Love”. It’s so dear to my heart, and the pictures still stun me. It was so timely. After all, I was broke, anxious and depressed because I was almost done with NYSC and didn’t have anything to do. That sale was like a catalyst for two other deals I got, and it was just amazing. 

    Your art was displayed in Times Square New York. How did that feel?

    Oh yes! It wasn’t even something from the queer series. It was from a collection I titled “Tribe”; a lot of my art is inspired by my culture. It was a picture of three guys. They had face paint and were wearing these wrappers.

    What’s been your favourite project?

    I believe “Celebrating Queers “ will always be my number one because it’s for my community and tribe. Right now, I’m working on a project called “Black Men Journal”, a series to celebrate black and African men. I’m also hoping to start a new project next year. I don’t know what I’ll call it yet, but it’ll be something along the lines of “the relationship between a mother and a child”. 

    Do you compensate your models?

    Most of my creative shorts are collaborations, so I just end up paying for transportation and maybe outfits, if I can. Sometimes, we don’t even have time to buy food, but there’s always water or drinks, and it’s just because by the time we’re done, everyone’s tired and just wants to go home. So like ₦15-20k, depending on the shoot location.

    Where does the money come from? 

    I do social media management on the side, but I quit my last one last month because it wasn’t for me. My art funds my art most times. I’m not where I want to be, but this year has been good, and I’m grateful. My dream is to live off my art one day. 

    What are your biggest struggles as an artist?

    Being a queer person in Nigeria is struggle enough. There’s always some homophobe in every space. You might be the best, and people would still undermine your work because of where you come from. And Nigerians don’t value or support talent, so that’s a struggle. I just love what I do; my passion is my inspiration to show up every day. I’m way past homophobia and all that.

    Who’s the biggest influence on your work?

    It’s less of who and more of what. The answer is my lifestyle, sexuality and culture; those are my biggest inspirations, and you can see those clearly in my art form. 

    What should we expect from you in the next couple of years? 

    Hopefully, my creative studio. Not just for photography, but also makeup content creation and other things. I’m really interested in film, and I’ll get to it as soon as I settle down to learn properly.

    Would you like to share any words of wisdom with fellow creatives?

    Do your thing as differently as possible. It’ll be hard sometimes, but if you’re really passionate about it, go for it with all your heart. Always put yourself first, especially when it comes to your art form, because nobody has the power to tell you what art should be. Only artists can choose what their art should be. 


    RELATED: Creator Spotlight: Healthy Living Is Cheap and Possible in Nigeria; Just Ask Fareedah

  • “I Moved To Dubai At 19 For Photography” – Abroad Life

    The Nigerian experience is physical, emotional, and sometimes international. No one knows it better than our features on #TheAbroadLife, a series where we detail and explore Nigerian experiences while living abroad.



    Today’s subject on Abroad Life took a holiday trip to Dubai in 2019 and decided to move there to start her life in 2020. She was 19 years old. She talks about the decision to move and settling down in a new country during COVID. 

    First things first, when did you decide to move to the UAE? 

    I came to Dubai on holiday in April 2019. I was 18. When I returned to Nigeria, I thought, “I can leave Nigeria and move to Dubai. I like it there.” So I got on my laptop and searched for jobs in Dubai. When I eventually found one, the process started well, but it didn’t end well so I let it go. 

    You were going to move to a different country at 18?

    Yes. My mum absolutely loved the idea. She’s not the typical Nigerian mother. I was born in Nigeria, but we moved to the UK for a short while. When we got back to Nigeria, I was in primary 5. In JSS 2, we realised my school was terrible and decided to switch schools. My mum thought, “Why don’t we homeschool you?” and that’s what happened. I was homeschooled by my mum until I took my GCE as an external student. By that time, I was 15. 

    A few months later, I realised I was interested in photography. My aunt got me a camera, and we decided I wasn’t going to university. 

    Wow. What did you do after secondary school?

    I went fully into photography for the next three years. After some time, I needed a change because I wasn’t getting clients anymore. I also knew I wanted to leave Nigeria. I thought about going to the US but it’s hard to just move to the US. Dubai was a better choice.

    When did you finally leave Nigeria?

    I didn’t stop searching for jobs, and in 2020, I finally found one. I packed my bags, said goodbye and left Nigeria with the little money I had saved. Because I was sure I was going to get the job and my employer would sponsor my work visa, I got a one-month visit visa instead of a three-month visa. Bad idea. By the time I had the interview, the lady who was going to hire me started changing her words and talking about how she couldn’t hire me because they were going through some stuff and she couldn’t sponsor my visa. It was super scary because I was running out of time.

    What happened next?

    One of the other companies I reached out to invited me for an interview. They were a wedding photography company, and they asked me to edit a picture. On a normal day, it would have taken me about an hour to edit that picture, but at that interview, it took me six hours. When I left, I knew I wasn’t going to get the job. I cried on the bus home. It was then I started getting scared about my visa status. I was also getting really broke. I thought I would already be earning at that point. I remember texting my mum and she told me everything was going to be okay. 

    So what did you do?

    I’d been stalking a company for months, so I shot my shot via an email. In my experience, companies in Dubai don’t reply to emails. For some reason though, these ones replied and invited me for an interview that same day. It was an art company, and they liked me because they thought I was cool. The fact that I dropped out of secondary school and didn’t have a university degree really attracted them to me. 

    How has it been settling in Dubai?

    I’ve had five jobs since I moved here. Somehow, I’m scared it’s always going to be like this because I need a job to maintain my visa status. COVID doesn’t help matters. But I’m here, and I’m pushing myself. I usually make friends in social gatherings, but because of COVID, I haven’t been able to socialise.

    The person that made it easiest for me to settle was my man. I met him during the period where it was toughest for me, and he made things easier. He also sent me food a lot. 

    My parents don’t know about him, but my sister does. I’m a Christian and he’s a Muslim; I’m not ready to have that conversation. 

    What’s the best thing about living in Dubai?

    The security. It still baffles me that I can leave my phone and wallet on a table in a restaurant or anywhere, come back and it’s still there.

    Does anything scare you?

    The scariest thing for me is the instability I feel. The fact that your resident permit is tied to your work is a good thing, but it can also be a bad thing. You can get a job and fit into the system, but it also means that if you lose your job, you’re starting from square one.


    Want more Abroad Life? Check in every Friday at 9 A.M. (WAT) for a new episode. Until then, read every story of the series here.

  • The #NairaLife Of A 21-Year-Old Jack Of All Trades

    Every week, Zikoko seeks to understand how people move the Naira in and out of their lives. Some stories will be struggle-ish, others will be bougie. All the time, it’ll be revealing.

    The Nairalife was pulled off in partnership with FCMB. Get started with a Personal Business Account for as low as ₦5,000 here!

    When did life first show you the importance of money? 

    I think I’m on that journey. I try to resist the urge to believe money is more than what it is: an exchange for value, but the world keeps showing me that all that one na okoto meow meow skrrr

    Money is literally what makes the world go round. So I think (I learned the importance) in university when I had to beg a flatmate I hated for money.

    Hahaha. What did you need money for?

    Food. Dinner. Bread and fried eggs. It tasted like humility. I thanked God for his existence in my life that night. 

    There was also that time in 2017 when I sold shirts I’d just gotten the day before. I was broke, but I used all my last money like (₦7k) to buy t-shirts. My eyes cleared the next day. I needed money, so I went around the hostel selling the shirts. I made ₦5k back. I’m a sucker for thrift clothing. If there’s a support group for something like that, I would go.

    So, what’s the first thing you ever did to earn? 

    I used to wash my parents’ car for ₦500 back in the day. I was about 11. It was fun. Outside family stuff, the first time was inputting the results of a questionnaire digitally into an excel sheet. I was 12, it was 2011. It paid ₦15k. 

    Excel at 12? Were you also paying rent?  

    It’s funny because I don’t know how to use sheets for anything more than data inputting till now. I hate the concept of sheets. If I need to do some other action, I google it and then forget later. 

    What else did you do, between then and now?

    Mostly freelance writing. I haven’t made a lot of money TBH. I’ll write advert scripts here and there, charge ₦25k-₦30k. Write greeting card captions. 

    Then there was social media management for about two different pages. I hated it. Maybe the longest I was at one was for three months. They didn’t pay well. One paid ₦25k a month for one post everyday.

    Another gig paid the same ₦30k for about 10 posts a day. Now that I think about it, it was slavery. It was a friend who got the job. He was engaged with so much, he couldn’t handle that one, so he gave me. They were paying him ₦90k. I knew we were splitting the money but I didn’t know it was that bad. 

    Woahh. 

    Then there were content creator jobs at advertising firms. I’m very interested and proficient in marketing strategy and advertising, and ideation and the creative writing part. Not “creating influencer tweets and handling social media” aspects. So I didn’t stay too long at any of the two places where I worked because that’s what they were making me do and I take job satisfaction very seriously. Besides, they both paid ₦40k.

    Interesting. 

    Also, I do bulk printing on every type of material. Shirts, umbrellas, cups, bags, pens. everything. Alongside making my own custom merch. I started that in 2019, registered my business, and it’s not gone too bad. I have a merch story from that that you’d probably love to hear as well.

    Intere –

    Oh, and I have also photographed. ₦25k in 2016. Model shoots for some Instagram clothes vendor. I decided I didn’t want to take pictures primarily for money anymore. I could do my street and life photography and frame and sell some mad pictures. But not active shoots. It was stressful. I used one of those apps that mass edits pictures and sent them back to the person. I am not proud of it.

    When did writing first pay you money?

    Sometime in 2017 when someone who knew I could write subcontracted a script to me and gave me ₦15k. 

    You know, I think the proudest money I probably made was ₦5k for playing for a company who needed footballers to play in their inter-organization games. I posed as an intern. We won the competition. I didn’t score but I was like “I earned from football, how many people can say that?”

    Hahaha. Tell me about your first structured job. 

    Internship. 2018. Content at an agency. I loved it, I think I did good work, and I loved the people I worked with. It paid ₦25k at my first stint from November 2018 – February 2019. The second stint was September 2019 – November 2019. ₦40k. This was around the time I graduated from University.

    Ah, interesting. What came next? 

    Internship. March and April 2020. A content gig at an agency. I didn’t love it. So I quit after two months. It paid ₦40k. I also felt very underpaid. 

    I compared it with my 2019 job where I was coming in only once a week and doing much less because I was a student. And they paid the same thing. Also, the salary negotiations were based on having not done NYSC, and that was why they had to pay me so little. I accepted the job because of the person that linked me to it, but the working environment was toxic so that was a dealbreaker. I can’t be sad and poor.

    Hahaha. Dude, you’re killing me. What did you do next? 

    Freelance writing for a company. ₦140k salary. Highest salary ever. But not the most money made ever.

    What’s the highest? 

    Maybe almost ₦400k from printing branded items for a company. February 2020. 

    Wait, tell me all the things you can do. 

    I can write anything. I find ways to solve problems I’m interested in. 

    And I have good eyes for quality. I learnt some code as well but I never code. I tried to go into fish farming this year and started with 50 fish. They all died. The water was contaminated. 

    Ouch. Okay, How much do you currently earn? 

    ₦150k plus ₦140k. 9 – 5 content creation job and freelance writing for another company. 

    What do your monthly expenses look like?

    Hm, it’s hard. Data is ₦10k. My savings depend on how much I make that month, but  I save ₦100k each from both salaries. Miscellaneous is like ₦20k… or ₦15k. I never budget or track my spendings. I spend on food and stuff, but some of the other money just stays in my account.

    So, what happens to all the remaining money?

    I have no idea. I’m on a course to change. Right now, I have about ₦400k altogether. 

    Lit. 

    Is it really? 

    You don’t think it is?

    I didn’t really start thinking about money until a recent conversation I had. I was talking with a friend about my spending and saving habits and I was complaining about how I never really save. She asked what the most money I ever had stacked up was. I lied. I said ₦100k to cover my shame when it really was about ₦50k at the highest. Her reaction shook me: she was like “₦100k??? God that’s bad o, get your money up and save better. You should also invest.” 

    I was so sad. That was when I started trying to have money and “hoping” for money. It’s not like I hustled for any of the money I have now.  The jobs I got after that time were from referrals, and that’s how I’m able to save this much in a few months. I’m looking to start investing soon, but I have no knowledge about finances. I’ll have to start learning about all of that soon.

    What’s something you want right now but can’t afford?

    Going into the streets, picking up hawker kids and sending them to school. 1 out of every 5 out-of-school children in the world is Nigerian. Nah. Seeing children hawk breaks me so bad. I just want them to have the same opportunity I did. It’s not like I’m great or anything. Everyone just needs basic education. 

    I’m curious about what you think you’ll be doing in five years.

    I honestly have no clue and I try not to think about it. I have been talking to God a lot and at the beginning of this year. He told me to just chill out and take things step by step through Him, that He’s got me. But in 5 years, I just hope I’ve travelled a lot and written some stuff that the whole world marvels at. Some ads, a movie, something. Married. With a kid. Maybe.

    How would you rate your current happiness levels? 1-10?

    I’ve always been a happy person for some reason. I’d say 8. Many times I just open plenty of doors in my head. Something always comes.

    You didn’t hear of how I got in almost a million naira in debt last year though. 

    WHAT?

    So I got a big printing gig. Big client, plenty of things to print. I would have made about ₦500k-₦600k from the deal if I knew what I was doing. I had a business partner. He was in the printing business long before me. So the business model was he was the production head and I was everything else. We got the deal, presented a sample, it was approved. Because I was the administrative head, I only briefly saw the sample, I knew what it looked like, but I didn’t ask for my own copy. The printer scammed my business partner. The guy presented a high-quality sample and printed nonsense. 

    I never bothered to go and inspect because my business partner was inspecting. I would call him every day and he would say everything was going smoothly. He wasn’t inspecting though: he was also calling that his guy to ask if everything was going good and that one told him yes. When it was time to deliver and I saw the stuff, I almost fainted. I knew nobody was going to collect that nonsense. The guy convinced my partner it was the same thing as the sample and we couldn’t do anything but deliver because it was the delivery date.

    They rejected the stuff. I was going to die. They brought out their sample and put them side by side with the new stuff we just brought and it was like comparing light to the darkness. Luckily after plenty begging, they asked us to re-print just a fraction of the original number of stuff we printed and since we had not paid the guy for the printing, we just used the money. Part of our profits went to reprint. The worst period of my life.

    Interesting. What about your merch? 

    I love t-shirts. I ingrain myself in series and movies and music I love. A type of ingraining is getting merch like t-shirts and caps about them. Also witty quotes and stuff. I tried to get a few of those made by merch makers in uni and they all messed up, bringing nonsense quality and poor execution. 

    That’s what made me start making my shirts myself. 

    After a few of those, I realised I could create great stuff by putting my wit and my eye for fashion and (not so great) sensitivity for ‘trends’ into life, and start making my own merch that was both fashionable and unique. That’s what I’m doing. 

    What are the numbers like? 

    Bad. I have only one release from my personal merch, and it has only one purchase.  But I shared another design and people are pre-ordering. 

    For custom orders, I still get a fair amount of orders, which I turn down if it’s not a bulk order. 

    How do you manage your business funds?

    I haven’t done business since that February deal, so I carelessly ate into that money for some time. Going forward, I want to be more intentional with what I do with it though. Put it back in the business, etc. I feel like I’m just actually starting my financial journey.

    You should op –

    Also, another thing I want but can’t afford is a Mac. Please God, hear me. That’s it.


  • 7 Of The Most Photographed Places In Lagos Would Like A Word With You

    Presented without commentary, seven of the most photographed places in Lagos would like to vent.

    These are their words.

    1) Lekki Conservation Centre:

    “They won’t say anything because they’re nice but people are sick and tired of hearing about how you almost died of fright on the canopy walkway. Also, me, you, and Jesus know that you never learned how to play chess. So you’re fooling absolutely no one by posing with the giant chess pieces with a pensive look on your face, you fucking fraud.”

    “That being said, y’all’s patronage keeps me open so feel free to mosey on down whenever you feel like deceiving people on Facebook into believing that you have an active social life.”

    2) Lekki-Ikoyi Link Bridge:

    “I don’t have the stats to back this up (because I’m a bridge) but I’m pretty sure Kim Kardashian has nothing on me when it comes to being photographed. At first, I loved all the attention I was getting. I’m pretty much a discount Golden Gate bridge rip-off so it makes sense that literally every photographer wanna-be with a cheap camera would want a picture of me at sunset or some shit like that. But now, the other bridges are beefing me (Third mainland bridge hasn’t spoken to me in years). It’ll be great if y’all just chill with the pictures for a little while so the other basic bridges can stop feeling bad.”

    “Also, to all those people who run across me, pretending to exercise while they cruise for sex, I’m judging the hell out of you.”

    3) Nike Art Gallery:

    “You might pretend like you’re here to admire the over 7000 pieces of art in me but the truth is you couldn’t care less about art. You’re only here to take the 30 pictures you’ll upload to Instagram over the next 15 weeks. And you know what?

    That’s perfectly fine.

    Be sure to show up with frizzy hair, dressed in a tie & dye shirt, fanny pack made out of beads, and rusted nose ring so that when you upload four of the pictures to Twitter with some incredibly cliche caption like, “Art is Life,” you’ll blend in perfectly with the woke crowd.”

    4) The Tea Room:

    “Some of you make me wish my interior wasn’t so pretty. My price list isn’t even insane like some of these other restaurants engaging in highway robbery on a daily but you people just come in, get the cheapest thing on the menu and dive into the flowers to start photoshoots. You disgust me.”

    5) Hardrock Cafe:

    “If all you do when you come here is take pictures with the sign outside, who’s going to eat my wildly overpriced burgers, huh? WHO’S GOING TO EAT THEM?!”

    6) Nok by Alara:

    “You know what? I’m not even offended. If someplace tried to sell me three pieces of gentrified puff puff (insanely spelt as pof pof ) for 800, I’d only go there to take pictures too.”

    7) The Cathedral Church Of Christ:

    “All y’all sinners need to take your china phones with 5-megapixel cameras and get the hell out of me! GET OUT! GO! So help me, I will call on lightning to strike…”

  • Exploring Nightlife in Lagos through the Lenses of the OPPO F11Pro

    Lagos a.k.a Lasgidi, the City of Grind is truly a city like no other. From the chaos of the black and yellow buses to the trading happening in almost every corner you turn to. From the beautiful architecture that defines the scenery of the city to the ever-angry sun that won’t stop shining. From the colourful tail lights from the traffic jam during rush hour to the rising smoke from suya and sharwama spots at night; Lagos is indeed the city that never sleeps.

    It appears everyone is always in a hurry. In a hurry to get to work and back, in a hurry to hang out and party with friends. Even when relaxing, it seems the time is in a hurry too.

    Smartphone brand OPPO mobile, in collaboration with celebrity photographer, Anny Robert, decided to embark on a photography project to show what people are up to when the sun goes down in Lagos.

    The concept was simple; Anny Roberts took us on an amazing photo-series journey through the lives and times of young Lagosians, leading different lives in their diverse activities from 8 pm to 1 am in Lagos, using the amazing 48+5MP camera of the OPPO F11 Pro as the official photography instrument.

    OPPO claims the F11 Pro can comfortably replace the average DSLR when they launched and they attempted to prove this. Here are a few pictures that were taken with the F11 Pro smartphone camera (without filters or edits):

    A young man getting a haircut at the barbershop by 8 PM.

    A freelancer meeting with a client at a local bar by 9 PM.
    Hanging out with an old flame at a local pub by 10 PM.
    Karaoke with a stranger at 11 PM.
    Waiting for an Uber by ‘Club O clock’ (12 Midnight)
    Dropping bae off at 1 AM.
    Video calling fiancée in another time zone by 2 AM.

    According to the Public Relations Manager of OPPO Nigeria, Joseph Adeola, OPPO is committed to delivering world-class products that solve the problems of the average Nigerian. Quality and standards will never be compromised, he emphasized.

    Anny Robert also admitted amidst beaming smiles that, “What is most impressive is the fact that this photo series proves the brilliant portrait in low light claim of the OPPO F11Pro to be true, as it exceeds all expectations of a phone and competes conveniently with my DSLR”.  

    Follow @opponigeria on Facebook/Instagram and @oppomobileng on Twitter for more information and updates.

  • 1. So you decided to join creative gang and become a photographer.

    Because you sef wan enter Bellanaija Weddings.

    2. And that means you have to get a good camera at least.

    People gats take you serious as a professional somebody.

    3. You, when you realize you can’t get a good camera for less than 100k.

    Jesus!

    4. That’s not all o, you’ll have to start googling orisirisi things like ‘exposure’ and ‘ISO’.

    So you thought all you had to do was press one button, LOL!

    5. When you start taking pictures and your clients still end up looking like Baba Suwe.

    Ty Bello glow, where you at now?

    6. So you have to start learning editing with Photoshop and Lightroom.

    Layers and layers of stress!

    7. Next thing your favorite photographer wants N1m for photography workshop.

    Obara Jesus!

    8. But you didn’t learn anything new at the workshop because you’ve seen everything on Youtube.

    Issa scam!

    9. New photographers, when they hear one of TY Bello’s cameras costs over N1M.

    You’re ready to sell your birthright for it!

    10. When you want to work with your fave photographer and he asks you to hold reflector through out.

    And they’ll now tag you as their photography assistant.

    11. You, when someone asks you to do free work for exposure.

    God punish devil o!

    12. When your client uploads your picture with one yeye Instagram filter.

    Ratchet behaviour!

    13. When you finally start getting recognised for your work.

    Oshay!!! Featured image credit: Bayo Omoboriowo

    More Zikoko!

    https://zikoko.com/list/gorgeous-pictures-of-nigeria-16017005/
  • 15 Stunning Pictures From Namibia That Will Make You Long For A Vacation
    Ben Mcrae is an Australian photographer who spends his time capturing beautiful moments in Africa, especially Namibia.

    1. This woman carrying firewood like it’s nothing.

    2. The most beautiful sand dunes ever.

    3. Namibia is stunning at night.

    4. A Himba woman shaving her son’s hair.

    5. Another beautiful starry night.

    6. This little boy is adorable.

    7. Morning chores on the Namibian countryside.

    8. These cubs look too innocent to bite.

    9. Are those cows?

    10. Story time for the Himba people.

    11. Even Namibian goats are pretty.

    12. This hippo looks angry though.

    13. it looks so peaceful here.

    14. These guys must be immune to cold.

    15. Her hair is long though.

  • Two years ago, talented Nigerian photographer and artist, Ike Ude, moved back  to the country and of course, he was captivated by the awesomeness that is Nollywood-the 2nd largest film industry in the world.

    In October of that same year (2014), he photographed and created stunning portraits of Nollywood actors, producers and directors, in a beautiful photo series aimed at celebrating the beauty of Nollywood

    This amazing work of art, ‘Nollywood Portraits: A Radical Beauty’, has gained recognition and will be showcased at the Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College Chicago from October 20th of October to the 23rd of December.

    It’s amazing how Nollywood is gradually receiving all the recognition and exposure it deserves.

    You can watch his campaign video for the exhibition here.
  • These Women Are Not Your Typical African Grandmas
    2 years ago, Nigerian photographer,  Ayo Akinwande, started shooting his photo series, Orekelewa, the first of his long-term project, ‘Women of Africa’.

    In this series, Ayo captured these beautiful Nigerian grandmas with the aim of portraying their beauty, strength and values.

    Check out more pictures from the series below:

    Just look at her fleeking brows. Their makeup was done by Desmond Soso.

    They were all styled by Adeniji Opeyemi and Seyi Kafi.

    Jamming to music via Beats headphones will make anyone smile like this.

    Just see how peng they look with their geles and heels.

    Not every time form serious, sometimes pout for a selfie.

    She looks amazing with her beach hat.

    If you want to view more pictures from Ayo, head to his Instagram page via @Iamayoakinwande.
  • This Nigerian Artist Has Created His Own Idea Of Lagos By 2050
    Lagos, with its 20 million people, is  slowly becoming one of the world’s biggest megacities and should therefore hold a place in the Sci-Fi world.

    That’s what Brooklyn-based Nigerian artist, Olalekan Jeyifous, aimed to achieve with his creative photo series, Shanty Megastructures.

    Using a series of 3D visuals, he created a realistic architectural view of Lagos in 2050, with massive tin towers spread across all the popular parts of the city.

    According to him, the slums of Lagos are usually left out of developmental projects and are mostly targeted for demolition. By doing this, whatever development that happens in the state mostly favours the rich.

    In Shanty Megastructures, he creates an idea where even the famous Makoko canal isn’t left out of the Sci-Fi age.

    Although his idea isn’t perfect…

    He however partnered with NLE Architects and Zoohaus/Inteligencias Colectivas to create a pollution-free and well-planned Lagos, in a previous project he called Uneven Growth.

    More pictures from Olalekan’s project can be viewed here.
  • These Men Are Basically The Coolest Grandpas You’ve Ever Seen
    Only a few  months after serving us greatness with these bad-ass grandmas, Kenyan photographer, Osborne Macharia, is back at it again.

    This time, in a pictorial called Kabangu, he tells the fictional story of Kenyan hip-hop grandpas who doubled as security guards in the 1980s.

    These artistes were known to mentor younger talents, teaching them social values.

    The Kabangu are basically the most bad-ass grandpas we’ve ever seen.

    The most amazing part of this project is how Macharia recreated amazing pictures to tell stories of people that have done awesome things in the past.

    These grandpas are goals! We so can’t wait to see what Osborne is working on next.

    Featured image credit via Osborne Macharia’s Instagram.
  • Looking At These 11 Pictures Will Play Tricks On Your Mind

    Whoever said pictures never lie definitely does not live in this century.

    Instagram’s official account on the app has a tradition of engaging their followers by throwing creative photo challenges with various hashtags.

    These 11 photos were taken with the aim of creating an optical illusion by simply placing objects or people in different positions and taking the photos from various perspectives.

    1. This cactus plant with human arms.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BDCZQA4hQab/?tagged=whpeyetricks

    2. The grooming of this giant dog.

    3. Hanging off a cliff with a friend.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BDCRANuhQdO/?taken-by=instagram

    4. How to put bae in your hands and give them a kiss.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BC8-v3KhQSw/?taken-by=instagram

    5. When a cute ballerina wears a flower tutu skirt.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BC9KqT4BQUt/?taken-by=instagram

    6. This levitating basketball.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BDC6dmloe1V/?tagged=whpeyetricks

    7. This giant human crushing finger.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BC9i_5JhQXj/?taken-by=instagram

    8. Beware of the giant T-rex dinosaur.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BC1E9R9hQZO/?taken-by=instagram

    9. Hanging on the edge for your dear life.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BDCWyfCFj-Z/?tagged=whpeyetricks

    10. Happy tiny humans on a can of potato chips.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BDCJobQDo5c/?tagged=whpeyetricks

    11. How many girls can you see in this picture?

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BCrKXu7hQSx/?taken-by=instagram

    We can’t wait for our talented African photographers to join in this challenge and blow our minds.

  • Could This Girl Be The Next Nigerian Supermodel?

    Celebrity photographer and musician, TY Bello is famous for taking breathtaking photos with exceptional lighting.

    She recently photographed Nigerian-British rapper, Tinie Tempah for the cover of the prestigious THISDAY style magazine.

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BBN22uqo2f_/?taken-by=tiniegram
    https://www.instagram.com/p/BBNqlbokbH3/?taken-by=tybello
    https://www.instagram.com/p/BBNqI5CEbGl/?taken-by=tybello

    While Tinie Tempah looked amazing, it was this Nigerian lady who stole the spotlight! She posed so effortlessly, didn’t she?

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BBNptvykbFa/?taken-by=tybello
    Well, she happened to have randomly walked into the shoot while hawking her agege bread and made the picture even more beautiful.

    Falling in love with the photo and the lady’s gracefulness, TY Bello via her Twitter and Instagram pages expressed her interest in meeting her and probably making her a model.

    Do you know who she is? We hope she is found and we look forward to seeing her grace beautiful magazine covers and runways.

    Featured Image via TY Bello
  • 17 Pictures Of Kano The Media Never Shows You
    A few weeks back we shared these 14 beautiful pictures of Northern Nigeria which featured some of the beauty in Yola and Bauchi. And we’ve got more images today! This time highlighting the beauty of Kano.

    Zikoko contributor, Kolapo Oladapo shared some of his shots from Kano with us:

    1. This section of the palace of the Emir.

    2. The path to the fourth gate of the palace.

    3. This picture of a young boy tending to his horse.

    4. What a beauty!

    5. A female baby horse being tended to be this young boy.

    6. All the suya you could ever want!

    7. This picture of the suya village.

    8. Hungry yet?

    9. This colourful image of fresh food in a market.

    10. The Crescent Secondary school’s football pitch.

    11. Young men enjoying a football game on the polo grounds.

    12. A man in a football jersey enjoying a game of polo.

    13. This shot of a Fulani kid.

    14. Fulani kids happily riding their bicycle.

    15. A Fulani house.

    16. This image of the Kano streets.

    17. This shot of the Ado Bayero Mall.

    All images by Kolapo Oladapo. Got any beautiful shots of Nigeria? Share them with us!
  • This Photoset by @TheLexash Shows How Beautiful Inter-racial Love Can Be


    Historically speaking, inter-racial relationships and marriages had regulations banning or restricting prior to 1967. In the Nigerian culture, inter-tribal relationships are still less common, and the general belief is that people should marry within their tribe. Interracial marriages are slowly becoming more acceptable, but there are still many who adhere to the ways of old.

    This photostory by Lexash Photography shows just how beautiful interracial relationships are, you know, because they’re simply relationships between two people.

    The Grey Area – that’s the title – tells of an arranged marriage between a Nigerian girl and an English man both given the huge responsibility of uniting their clans:

    The Girl. Unassuming and Naive.

    The Englishman. Proper and perfect.

    https://instagram.com/p/5SAgD6rRRx/

    Their first meeting. The air was pregnant with tension.

    https://instagram.com/p/5h2PsPrRQ_/

    And the first time he held her hand. Awkward but exciting.

    https://instagram.com/p/5sUf4crRaA/

    Then the transformation began. They began to relax.

    https://instagram.com/p/5xhTgwrRX_/

    To get to know each other.

    https://instagram.com/p/55Lp5NrRfC/

    Then it was the wedding day. Maybe a little soon.

    https://instagram.com/p/6CF2uKLReM/

    But it was true beauty – different but still beauty.

    https://instagram.com/p/6MhMJoLRTD/

    And the start of a strange kind of happiness.

    https://instagram.com/p/6TC2BqLRdb/

    The world might not understand it.

    https://instagram.com/p/6YB7kCLRd0/

    They might not approve, even.

    https://instagram.com/p/6fqwvFrRfD/

    But it doesn’t matter what they think.

    https://instagram.com/p/6neWh_rRYP/

    Because Love – no matter your colour, religion, tribe, orientation, race – is Love.

    https://instagram.com/p/6xu_qWLRf3/

    Don’t you agree?


    The story features Michael Rosenberg, a Soft Skills Trainer at Andela and Korede Ajasa, a student at the University of Lagos, Beth Model and Face of Zaron 2015/2016 Campaign.

    The Grey Area story reminds us of a thing that people easily forget. Humans are imperfect, unpredictable, making them the most impressive, interesting beings. Here, we are reminded of the fact that relationships are never smooth-sailing. This is a beautiful, beautiful love story, so share this with someone to brighten up their day!