TheFace: Ramah Nassief and Yasmin Kaki, Saudi food entrepreneurs

Ramah Nassief and Yasmin Kaki. (AN photo by Ziyad Alarfaj)
Updated 06 July 2018
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TheFace: Ramah Nassief and Yasmin Kaki, Saudi food entrepreneurs

  • Through Sinless, Ramah Nassief and Yasmin Kaki want to prove that healthy food can also be delicious and satisfying. 

Ramah Nassief and Yasmin Kaki met for the first time when they were both eight. Their friendship at the time revolved around their favorite foods. 

Twenty years later, food brought them together again as two entrepreneurs who own and operate a restaurant founded on the principles of healthy living based in Jeddah. 

Through Sinless, they want to prove that healthy food can also be delicious and satisfying. 

They also aspire to raise awareness about the importance of making the right food choices and the effect that has on our physical and mental health.

The rate of chronic lifestyle diseases is at an all-time high in Saudi Arabia and these ladies plan to do something about it. 

 


AlUla inspires Saudi designer on global stage 

Updated 9 sec ago
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AlUla inspires Saudi designer on global stage 

  • Dalal Al-Juhani has represented Saudi Arabia at domestic and global events, spotlighting the nation’s creative vitality and cultural richness

ALULA: A Saudi designer has channeled childhood artistic enthusiasm into a distinguished professional career, weaving AlUla’s aesthetic and cultural character into creations that celebrate authenticity, while also drawing on the Kingdom’s cultural and natural legacy. 

Dalal Al-Juhani’s interest in design began early, and she has refined her skills through rigorous academic training and hands-on practice.  

The designer has represented Saudi Arabia at domestic and global events, spotlighting the nation’s creative vitality and cultural richness.

Her accolades include gold at London’s International Trade Exhibition for AI-driven tourism guide attire innovation, dual Romanian and Croatian gold medals at the same event, third-place recognition in King Abdulaziz University’s handicrafts division for sustainable accessory concepts, and gold at the 2025 Saudi International Innovation and Invention Exhibition for eco-conscious jewelry inspired by the Prophet's Mosque ornamentation. 

Al-Juhani strives to feature the Kingdom’s natural resources and domestic industries as foundational elements in her work. 

Observing the nation’s landscapes gives designers an expanded capacity to distil beauty and integrate it within contemporary creations honoring traditional foundations, she said. 

Al-Juhani acknowledges the Kingdom’s support for cultural and artistic pursuits, saying that specialized government bodies have facilitated cultural education through targeted programs, including overseas scholarships and professional development initiatives, reinforcing national expertise within creative industries and fostering excellence. 

She believes designers should look beyond aesthetic production and seek to preserve heritage, safeguard cultural memory, and respect ancestral roots, while projecting national character. 

AlUla constitutes a visual and intellectual touchstone throughout her portfolio. The area’s distinctive topography, archeological inscriptions, and ecological diversity inform a design vocabulary that reveals a symbiotic connection among individuals, geography, and identity, she said.