In the heart of Lagos, Ile Ila meaning “House of Lines” in Yoruba, is rewriting the narrative of African home aesthetics through bold, culturally grounded design.
Founded by architect and designer Tosin Oshinowo, the brand is best known for its hand-crafted armchairs and vibrant upholstery, but its true essence lies in how it reinterprets Yoruba identity for the 21st-century home.
Each piece from Ile Ila is a celebration of culture. The brand’s signature chairs are not only ergonomically precise, they’re a tapestry of storytelling. Wrapped in Aṣọ Oké fabric, a traditional Yoruba woven textile typically used for ceremonies, the furniture takes on symbolic power.
The patterns, the colors, the weaves, they all speak to heritage, memory, and identity, brought into the living rooms and personal sanctuaries of today’s discerning clientele.
Ile Ila’s work is both local and continental. From curated homes in Lekki to collector estates in Nairobi, the brand is favored by elites who seek design that carries meaning.
It offers more than furniture, it offers a narrative. Chairs become heirlooms. Fabrics become a bridge between modern minimalism and cultural pride.
Beyond design, Tosin Oshinowo is a thought leader on the future of African living, sustainable, context-sensitive, and proudly indigenous.
Her architectural sensibility shapes not just homes but how people move through them: how light enters, how textures meet the skin, and how design speaks without saying a word.
For Africa’s elite, Ile Ila isn’t just furnishing homes. It’s anchoring a design revolution—one that is deeply African, boldly expressive, and unmistakably refined.