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Tiffany Amber Breakfast Club Concludes International Women’s Month with an Ode to Intentional Living

As dawn settled softly over Lagos, Tiffany Amber welcomed a quietly powerful circle of women into its Ikoyi sanctuary — Tiffany Amber Gardens for the second edition of the Tiffany Amber Breakfast Club, an intimate gathering devoted not to spectacle, but to stillness.

Conceived as a moment to close International Women’s Month, the morning unfolded under a singular purpose: to create space for reflection, alignment, and intention in the lives women are crafting. Because at Tiffany Amber, true luxury is not only worn, it is lived.

A diverse group of people seated along a long dining table in a clothing showroom, enjoying a meal among racks of dresses and lush plants.

 

The Art of Intentional Living

People at a fashion boutique or show, one woman in a colorful ruffled dress serving pastries at a table while others browse clothes in the background.

Unlike conventional assemblies, the Breakfast Club is less an event and more a state of being: unhurried, unfiltered, deeply human. Here, connection is not curated, it is reclaimed.

This year’s theme, “The Art of Intentional Living,” emerged not as a proclamation but as a quiet motif, weaving through every story shared, every pause taken, every knowing glance exchanged.

Within this serene enclave, a faultless mélange of women across business, media, and culture gathered, not to perform, but to present themselves.

Two women sit on a bench in a bright, plant-filled setting, smiling at the camera; one in a white striped dress, the other in a black floral gown.

Pastor Tolu Odukoya spoke with grounded candour on faith and purpose; entrepreneur Valerie Obaze revealed the discipline and clarity required to build legacies that endure; and Bola Balogun reflected on transformation, growth, and the grace that seasons both ambition and surrender.

Each insight offered a mirror. Each voice, a meditation.

Two women smile for a selfie, wearing bold, colorful outfits and accessories at what looks like a fashion event.

Intimacy, Evolution, and Grace

A particularly poignant exchange unfolded between Folake Akindele, Founder and Creative Director of Tiffany Amber, and Bola Balogun, exploring the quiet intimacies of friendship — not the polished, performative kind, but one rooted in truth, boundaries, and mutual evolution.

Later, Elizabeth Osho and Fade Ogunro guided a conversation on transition;  the courage to release expectation, to embrace fluidity, and to choose alignment with who you are becoming rather than who you have been.

A Gentle Revolution

What lingered was not a single takeaway, but a resonance,  a collective exhale. A reminder that intentional living is neither grand nor abrupt, but composed of quiet, consistent choices made with awareness.

As the morning drew to a close, the atmosphere stilled, a synthesis of reflection, connection, and grace embodying the essence of Tiffany Amber’s enduring philosophy: to live, to lead, and to design with intention.

About Tiffany Amber

Founded in 1998 by Folake Akindele, Tiffany Amber stands as a pioneering force in African luxury fashion. The house is celebrated for its refined ready-to-wear collections, fluid silhouettes, and a design language that fuses craftsmanship with cultural depth and contemporary elegance.

Nearly three decades on, Tiffany Amber continues to redefine African luxury for the global stage — a brand that transcends fashion to become a lifestyle, a voice, and a symbol of purposeful femininity.

At Tiffany Amber, luxury is more than aesthetic. It is a way of being

 

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