Rawdah Mohamed promotes Dolce & Gabbana eyewear campaign

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Updated 26 November 2024
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Rawdah Mohamed promotes Dolce & Gabbana eyewear campaign

DUBAI: Somali Norwegian model Rawdah Mohamed took to social media to celebrate her latest campaign with Italian label Dolce & Gabbana.

The model took to Instagram to share a video of the marketing materials, on show in an eyewear outlet in the UAE’s Dubai Mall. Mohamed posed for the Italian luxury label’s latest eyewear collection and can be seen showing off sunglasses while wearing various patterned hijabs.

“What a moment! Thank you to the @dolcegabbana team and @nimabenati for always capturing my beauty,” Mohamed captioned the post, highlighting Italian fashion photographer Nima Benati’s role in the project. She now walks the runway for storied brands and stars in luxury fashion campaigns, but Mohamed’s early years were marked by upheaval as her family fled Somalia’s civil war for the safety of Kenya when she was just a baby. Alongside her parents and nine siblings, including an adopted sister, she spent her childhood in a refugee camp before relocating to Norway at the age of eight.

Mohamed previously told Arab News that she “sort of stumbled into modeling” after a mutual friend put her in touch with her manager while she was at university studying for a degree in behavioral analysis and healthcare.

Mohamed said: “I went to a fashion show in Oslo at the end of 2018 where I met my manager. He told me about what they were doing and I went to his office for a meeting and I said I wasn’t sure if I wanted to be a model but I wanted to work in fashion.”

Fast forward to 2024 and she is fast becoming a recognizable face in the industry, working with brands like Boss and H&M.

Mohamed walked the Roberto Cavalli show in Dubai in September, wearing an all-black three-piece suit consisting of a structured blazer, a fitted vest, and wide-legged trousers, all crafted from a subtly textured fabric. The outfit was completed with a dramatic wide-brimmed black hat that was styled over a black hijab.

“A privilege to walk the runway of @roberto_cavalli show. Sublime collection,” she later wrote on Instagram.

She was also spotted on the red carpet at the Cannes Film Festival in France in 2023 and 2024.

 


Stars gather in London for 2025 fashion awards

Updated 02 December 2025
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Stars gather in London for 2025 fashion awards

DUBAI: From Yasmine Hamdan to supermodel Iman, stars from the worlds of fashion and entertainment gathered on the red carpet at The Fashion Awards 2025 in London on Monday.

The event at the Royal Albert Hall was attended by celebrities such as actresses Cate Blanchett and Sienna Miller, the latter debuting her baby bump in a sheer Givenchy gown.

The ceremony, founded in 1989, is overseen by the British Fashion Council. This year marked the first under new council CEO Laura Weir.

Hosted by US actor Colman Domingo, the event and saw Jonathan Anderson named Designer of the Year award for his work at Dior and JW Anderson — the third year he has won the award. Taking to the stage, he said: “I love being in the house of Dior because it’s a massive challenge … I believe in collaboration, thank you so much for this honor.”

Givenchy’s Sarah Burton won British Womenswear Designer of the Year, with Grace Wales Bonner taking the menswear equivalent.

This year’s Vanguard Award went to Turkish designer Dilara Findokoglu. The Isabella Blow Award for Fashion Creator went to Rei Kawakubo, Adrian Joffe and Dickon Bowden for Dover Street Market, and the Outstanding Achievement Award was handed to Brunello Cucinelli.

US Sudanese model Anok Yai was named Model of the Year. (Getty Images)

US Sudanese model Anok Yai was named Model of the Year. Accepting her prize, an emotional Yai said: “To all the little Black girls watching me right now, your colour is not a curse … you are more powerful than you can imagine,” reported the BBC.

She took to the stage in a cream corseted custom gown by Dilara Findikoglu. The floor-length dress featured swathes of lace, crushed velvet and satin, and a dramatic train.

“Whenever you see a Dilara piece, you know that it’s her work right away … I love the romance of her pieces — there’s this raw, edgy darkness to it that I’ve been obsessed with,” Yai told Vogue magazine ahead of the ceremony.