When picked up a crochet hook in university, she didn鈥檛 set out to build a fashion empire. It started as a creative outlet, a way to craft and experiment. But within a few years, what began as a side hustle has become a thriving fashion business with customers across Nigeria, the US, Canada, and Europe. Now, Ore is focused on building a sustainable ecosystem and redefining how Nigerians see handmade fashion.

Where It All Started
For Ore, crocheting started as a creative experiment. 鈥淚 crocheted for fun,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut even from the start, I took it seriously.鈥
Her first piece was a humble collaboration with a photographer friend in 2017, styling a model in one of her handmade designs. 鈥淭he photos never even made it out,鈥 she laughs. 鈥淏ut that was the first time I imagined crochet as fashion, not just a primary school craft.鈥
Back then, crochet wasn鈥檛 the trend it is now. Nigerians still saw it as a home economics project, a pastime for school girls, not a wardrobe essential. 鈥淧eople didn鈥檛 wear crochet on their skin,鈥 Ore explains. 鈥淭hey thought of it as bags or thick knitted sweaters. Knitting isn鈥檛 even the same thing. I had to introduce crochet as fashion.鈥
Ore鈥檚 edge was simple: she wore her brand everywhere. 鈥淚 carried it on my head,鈥 she says. 鈥淓verywhere I went, I wore crochet. Bags, tops, anything. People had to see it to understand it.鈥 She became a walking billboard for a style no one believed in yet.
But crochet wasn鈥檛 her first venture. She tried selling Ankara. Then hairdressing. 鈥淎nkara was capital-intensive, and hairdressing was just too much labour for too little pay.鈥 Crochet, however, clicked as she neared the end of her first year in university. Two years later, she landed her first major order 鈥 鈧100,000, a small fortune for a student. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when I realised this wasn鈥檛 just a hobby. It could be something big.鈥
The Internship That Pushed Her to Bet on Herself
In her third year at the University, Ore interned at a chaotic radio station. The hours were brutal, salaries were delayed, and the experience was borderline exploitative. 鈥淚 worked from 7 a.m. to 7 p.m., pouring myself into tasks that yielded no income. Even after I left, my boss reached out to ask for a loan.鈥
That internship became a turning point. 鈥淚t was clear that this environment wasn鈥檛 for me. My crochet side hustle was already making enough to pay my boss鈥檚 salary. So why wasn鈥檛 I doubling down on what was already working?鈥
At this time, Ore鈥檚 business was averaging 鈧400k per month. But when the lockdown hit, everything changed. With the world stuck at home and shopping online, her revenue jumped to 鈧700k, and the business began to take off.
To reach more international customers, she set up an Etsy store. It worked at first, but by 2021, the platform became unsustainable for her business. 鈥淓tsy was a great starting point,鈥 she says, 鈥渂ut the fees and restrictions were holding us back. We needed to 鈥 a digital home that truly reflected the brand and made payments easier for our customers.鈥

That year, Ore鈥檚 monthly revenue climbed to 鈧1 million, hiring five staff members across logistics and production to keep up with growing demand.
When she graduated in 2022, she had a choice: chase a 9鈥5 she didn鈥檛 believe in, or bet fully on the business that had financed her life in university: paying her school fees, rent, and even salaries for a small team of interns. It was time to bet on herself.
鈥淚 was scared,鈥 she admits. 鈥淚鈥檇 never worked a proper job before, and running a company is different from running a one-woman hustle.鈥 But she packed her bags, moved to Abuja, and leapt. 鈥淚 did it afraid. I remember almost crying at the airport. My parents wanted me to finish NYSC and settle down first. But I knew if I didn鈥檛 start now, I might never.鈥
New Beginnings, and a Multi-Million Naira Revenue
Relocating to Abuja allowed Ore to focus on the business full-time, free from the demands of being a student. With more time and headspace, she could scale operations, taking on larger orders and running the business from her apartment. That same 2022, she hit her first 鈧2鈥撯偊3 million in months. 鈥淥ne customer placed a 鈧1.6 million order,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淭hat motivated me.鈥
At this point, the business still ran like a side hustle. Interns were unofficial, and operations were fluid. 鈥淚 was learning on the job,鈥 Ore says. 鈥淗iring people who didn鈥檛 meet expectations, not communicating because I didn鈥檛 want to hurt their feelings. I鈥檇 prioritise their comfort over the business. That caused resentment.鈥
Another mistake she made was saying no out of fear. 鈥淚 turned down so many opportunities because I didn鈥檛 feel ready. When the Oyo State government invited me to train women on crochet, I was young and thought, 鈥榃hat do I know?鈥 They reached out multiple times. I just ghosted them.鈥
It wasn鈥檛 until 2023 that Ore realised she needed to sit up and truly understand the business side of things. Until then, she had been winging it 鈥 no bookkeeping, structured operations, or clear financial systems. 鈥淚 hadn鈥檛 properly understudied how real businesses worked,鈥 she admits. 鈥淚f I wanted to scale beyond a side hustle, I needed to do better.鈥 That year, she began taking business operations and management courses, determined to transform her passion project into a structured, scalable brand.
Ore officially registered her company in Nigeria in 2023 and completed its US registration the following year.
2024: The Year She Rebuilt Her Business
By 2024, Ore had learned the hard lessons. She restructured the business from the ground up, drafting proper contracts for her staff, hiring an executive assistant, and expanding her team to 10 people, including a creative director, social media manager, lawyer, and a full production unit.
She also doubled down on marketing and operations, determined to move from a one-woman hustle to a well-rounded fashion company.
That year, she launched her first official collection: the 鈥淚t was my attempt to move from being just a designer to a full-fledged fashion brand with seasonal collections,鈥 she says. The launch was a success. Six outfits, gender-inclusive designs, bags, bikinis, and caps. 鈥淚t was the first time I worked with an official photographer, models of different body types, and it paid off.鈥

But 2024 wasn鈥檛 all wins. Ore made a 鈧5 million gamble on a girls鈥 collection that didn鈥檛 launch as planned. 鈥淲e overshot. We spent so much on production, but the release was delayed for months. Sales didn鈥檛 come in as expected. It set us back.鈥
That period became her toughest, the 鈥渂rokest鈥 the business had ever been. Yet, it forced her to reevaluate. 鈥淚 had to learn it鈥檚 okay to fail, to make mistakes, and to communicate better with my customers. That collection didn鈥檛 go as planned, but it became one of my most important learning experiences.鈥
Peak Moments and Ongoing Battles
By the end of 2024, Ore鈥檚 brand peaked with the Ozzy Jumper, a collaborative piece with fashion icon . 鈥淚t became our bestseller,鈥 she says. 鈥淥ver 200鈥300 orders. One was sold for 鈧416K.鈥 That piece was a breakthrough into new customer segments. 鈥淥zzy is a trend setter.鈥

But beyond aesthetics, Ore鈥檚 real business pivot came with infrastructure. Registering in the US, integrating Stripe for payments, and setting up systems that allowed global customers to buy seamlessly. 鈥淏efore, it was a struggle with PayPal, CashApp, Venmo. Now, we鈥檙e accessible in 190 countries.鈥
About 50% of her customers are in the US and Canada, 25% in Nigeria, and the rest are scattered across Europe and the UK. But growth hasn鈥檛 been linear. 鈥淚n 2024, there were months we did 鈧5 million, others 鈧10 million. And sometimes orders dip, and we have to push harder.鈥
In hindsight, Ore wishes she had spent more time understanding business operations before diving in. 鈥淚 was crocheting and learning as I went. It would鈥檝e been helpful to understudy a real system.鈥 Still, she鈥檚 making up for lost ground. Plans for a business MBA in Fashion Communication are in motion.
Expanding Beyond Fashion: Ruggings and New Frontiers
Beyond fashion, Ore is diversifying. She recently launched a second franchise, , which she aims to firmly establish within Nigeria鈥檚 interior design space. Their first collection, a line of plushies, was released in July 2025, marking Ruggings鈥 official debut.
What’s Next for Ore Akinde?
Ore plans to release a new collection this summer, a key driver for 2025鈥檚 revenue. But beyond custom orders and viral jumpers, she鈥檚 focused on building a sustainable crochet fashion brand.
鈥淚n the next four to five years, I want my business to produce 100 to 200 orders a month,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檒l have our own atelier, not just a small store, but a space that feels like a home for creativity. A place where outfits are made, yarns are designed, and rugs are crafted. It鈥檒l be big enough to hold all my people working at once, and it鈥檒l be busy because the business itself is thriving.鈥
Ore鈥檚 vision isn鈥檛 just about fashion; it鈥檚 about owning the supply chain. She plans to import her own yarn and eventually create custom yarn lines for other creatives. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to just be a retailer. I want to be a producer.鈥

In the immediate future, she鈥檚 gearing up for pop-up events in Lagos and Ghana, her first venture into physical retail after years of made-to-order sales. 鈥淲e鈥檙e taking it one step at a time. Walking too fast while carrying something heavy? You鈥檒l fall. I don鈥檛 want that.鈥
But she鈥檚 also painfully aware of the cultural disconnect around handmade products in Nigeria. 鈥淧eople here don鈥檛 understand the effort. They think handmade should be cheap. So you have to find your people, the customers who get it. Branding and constant visibility are key. Always put your work out there.鈥
What keeps her grounded through entrepreneurship’s unpredictable highs and lows is simple: choice. 鈥淓very time it gets difficult, I remind myself I chose this. Business is wild. When it鈥檚 high, it鈥檚 very high. When it鈥檚 low, it鈥檚 low. But I鈥檝e learned not to let the lows crush me or let the highs carry me away. It鈥檚 all about balance.鈥
Creativity, she鈥檚 learned, can鈥檛 be forced. 鈥淲hen my brain feels foggy, I don鈥檛 push. I let it rest. Ideas come back when they鈥檙e ready. Sometimes I even get them in my dreams, I wake up and jot them down before they run away.鈥
The atelier isn鈥檛 here yet. The studio and the in-house yarn production are still in the works. But for Ore, that鈥檚 the beauty of it. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 just want a store. I want an ecosystem. A space where everything we create comes to life in its full expression. I鈥檓 carrying it carefully, one steady step at a time. There鈥檚 no point rushing to build something that can鈥檛 stand tall.
We鈥檙e focused on growing without compromising our production quality, prioritising quality over quantity, and staying true to handmade craftsmanship,鈥 she says.
For Ore, what started as a personal hobby is now evolving into a hub where creativity, commerce, and craftsmanship co-exist.
Next Read: Nigerians Say My 鈧250k Crochet Slippers Are Too Expensive. But I鈥檓 Building a Luxury Brand Like Dior
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