Meet Francesca Lake — The Jamaican Designer Dressing Rihanna, Erykah Badu & Supermodel Naomi Campbell With Statement Pieces

4 weeks ago 5

Meet Francesca Lake — the Jamaican designer redefining celebrity fashion one statement piece at a time. From Rihanna and Erykah Badu to British supermodel Naomi Campbell, the Kingston-born creative is fast becoming one of the most exciting new voices in global fashion, capped by a major co-sign with a feature in the December edition of French fashion and lifestyle magazine Elle.

Based in London but rooted deeply in Jamaican culture, Lake’s rise has been swift and striking. Just months after presenting her graduate collection in 2023, she received a now-career-defining DM from Erykah Badu. “I had to take a screenshot to make sure it was real,” Lake recalls. That moment soon translated into global visibility when Badu stepped out ahead of the Met Gala wearing Lake’s voluminous yellow pleated Church Dress, complete with a crucifix mesh insert and the designer’s towering Barrel Come headpiece — a look that later dominated the Met Gala red carpet and afterparty.

Erykah Badu

Lake’s work thrives in contrast. Drawing inspiration from the rigid modesty of church culture and the unapologetic freedom of dancehall and carnival, her designs explore the tension between reverence and rebellion. Candy-coloured taffeta, oversized raffia, acid-wash denim and provocative silhouettes come together to form a bold new fashion language. “I want to make clothes that are as loud and proud as we are as a people,” she says, positioning her brand as both cultural storytelling and visual resistance.

After studying Cultural Studies at the University of the West Indies before enrolling at Central Saint Martins, Lake launched her label in 2024 and quickly secured a spot on the SS25 London Fashion Week schedule through the British Fashion Council’s DiscoveryLab. With Rihanna and Naomi Campbell now among her growing list of supporters, Lake is expanding into ready-to-wear and menswear while maintaining her sculptural red-carpet pieces. Purpose-driven and globally focused, she’s not just dressing icons — she’s reshaping how Jamaican identity is seen on the world stage.

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