The Golden Thread: Kente Cloth and the Ashanti Kingdom

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The Golden Thread:
Kente Cloth, the Ashanti Kingdom & the Story Behind the Socks

A spider's web. A stool descended from the sky. A warrior queen who led an army barefoot into battle to protect her people's soul. The story of Wataka's Ashanti and Kente Socks begins long before the loom.

Wataka Ashanti Socks — made in South Africa with kente-inspired design. Shop the Ashanti Socks →

Somewhere in the Ashanti Region of Ghana, in a village called Bonwire, two farmers once paused on their way home and watched something extraordinary. A spider — the great trickster and storyteller Anansi — was spinning his web. Thread by thread, a luminous architecture appeared between the branches: geometric, intentional, shimmering. They went home and tried to recreate what they had seen. What emerged from their fingers would become one of the most celebrated textiles on earth: kente cloth.

That story is over three hundred years old. And it is woven — quite literally — into the cotton of every pair of Wataka Ashanti Socks and Kente Socks.

A master weaver at work in Bonwire — the village where kente cloth was born after two hunters watched Anansi spin. The narrow-strip loom produces four-inch bands that are later sewn into full cloth. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

A Kingdom Dressed in Colour

The Ashanti — also written Asante — are an Akan people whose homeland sits in the lush forest belt of southern Ghana, centred on the golden city of Kumasi. The Ashanti Confederacy was established in the 1670s under King Osei Tutu I, who united a scattering of small clans into one of the most powerful and culturally sophisticated empires in West African history. Gold was not simply wealth here — it was sacred. It was the very language in which the Ashanti spoke to the divine. The Asantehene wore sandals of gold, carried a golden stool, and was attended by sword-bearers whose blades were sheathed in gold leaf.

And into this world of gold and story, the spider's gift arrived. The two farmers from Bonwire — Krugu Amoaya and Watah Kraban, as oral tradition names them — brought what they had learned to King Osei Tutu himself. He saw immediately that this was not merely fabric. This was a visual language — a text woven in thread, capable of communicating lineage, status, philosophy, and prayer without a single word. Kente was declared royal cloth. Bonwire became the royal weaving enclave. And the spider's web became a kingdom's signature.

Anansi's Web: The Cloth as Living Text

To understand kente is to understand that every element carries meaning. The Adire African Textiles gallery in London describes kente as "the best-known and most widely appreciated of all African textiles." But its fame should never be confused with familiarity. This is one of the most complex, intentional, and deeply coded textiles ever created.

Kente is woven in narrow strips — typically around four inches wide — on a horizontal treadle loom, then sewn together into larger cloth. A master weaver carries hundreds of patterns in memory, each with its own name, story, and symbolic weight. Patterns are named for proverbs, for queen mothers, for chiefs, for battles, for philosophical ideas. Choosing a kente design is not like choosing a print — it is like choosing a statement of intent.

Kente strips, freshly woven — each band woven separately on a narrow loom, carrying its own pattern name and meaning, before being sewn into full cloth. Photo: Wikimedia Commons
"To wear kente is to wear a sentence. Every pattern has a name, every colour a meaning, every thread a story older than most nations." 

What the Colours Say

In Ashanti culture the relationship between colour and meaning remains intact, specific, and sacred. When you read the colours of a kente cloth, you are reading a sentence about its wearer's identity and intentions.

Colour Ashanti Meaning
Gold / Yellow Royalty, wealth, high status, the glory of a glorious past
Green Growth, renewal, spiritual rebirth, medicine, the fertile earth
Red Political passion, sacrifice, the blood of the ancestors, strength
Black Spiritual maturity, intensified spiritual energy, the ancestors
Blue Peacefulness, harmony, love, deep wisdom
White / Silver Serenity, purity, joy, healing, feminine energy

 

In December 2024, UNESCO formally recognised kente cloth as an Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity — an acknowledgement of what Ghanaians have always known: this cloth is not fashion. It is civilisation.

The loom at work — kente weaving is slow, meditative, and precise. Some weavers spend years learning a single family of patterns before they are considered ready to weave for ceremonial cloth. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

The Golden Stool That Nobody Could Sit On

No story of the Ashanti is complete without the Sika Dwa Kofi — the Golden Stool Born on a Friday. According to oral tradition, around the year 1700, the legendary priest Okomfo Anokye stood before King Osei Tutu and his assembled chiefs. He called down a stool from the sky. It descended through thunder and darkness and settled, gently, on the lap of the king.

The Golden Stool is not a throne — it is the soul of the Ashanti nation. It houses the sunsum (spiritual essence) of every Ashanti person who has ever lived, is living now, and is yet to be born. It must never touch the ground. It has its own throne beside the king's. Even the Asantehene is not permitted to sit on it — during coronation, he is lowered and raised above it three times without contact.

Brass and Gold Weights for weaving
Ashanti brass gold weights — miniature sculptures used to measure gold dust, the currency of the empire. Each one a small work of art: figures, animals, proverbs cast in brass. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Yaa Asantewaa: The Queen Who Said No

By the end of the 19th century, the British Empire had been pressing against Ashanti sovereignty for decades. In 1896, Asantehene Agyeman Prempeh I was captured and exiled to the Seychelles. In March 1900, Sir Frederick Hodgson, British Governor of the Gold Coast, marched into Kumasi and made a demand that would ignite one of the most remarkable uprisings in colonial history: he demanded to sit on the Golden Stool. He wanted the symbol of the Ashanti soul as his footrest.

The statue of Yaa Asantewaa outside the museum built in her honour in Ejisu, Ghana — Queen Mother, warrior, farmer, and one of Africa's great icons of resistance. Photo: Jack Beesley / Wikimedia Commons

In the ensuing silence, it was not a general who spoke. It was Yaa Asantewaa, Queen Mother of Ejisu. She seized a gun and fired it into the air. Then she addressed the chiefs:

"How can a proud and brave people like the Asante sit back and look while white men took away their king and chiefs, and humiliated them with a demand for the Golden Stool?" — Yaa Asantewaa, Queen Mother of Ejisu, Kumasi 1900

She led thousands in what became known as the War of the Golden Stool. Though the British eventually prevailed militarily, they never captured the stool — it had been hidden. The British were forced to formally acknowledge they would never interfere with it again. Yaa Asantewaa was exiled to the Seychelles, where she died in 1921. She never saw her homeland again. But her name is woven into the Ashanti story as permanently as gold thread in silk kente.


Kente Goes Global: A Cloth of Resistance and Pride

During the trans-Atlantic slave trade, enslaved Akan people carried kente traditions across the ocean. In the United States, in Brazil, in Jamaica, fragments of that visual language survived in quilts, in music, in patterns carved into wood. When Ghana became the first sub-Saharan African country to gain independence in 1957, President Kwame Nkrumah wore kente to his inauguration — and a global symbol was crystallised. Since the 1960s, kente has been adopted across the African diaspora as a symbol of Pan-Africanism and Afrocentric identity. Today it appears at graduation ceremonies, civil rights marches, on red carpets, on the floor of the United States Congress.

The cloth travelled far from Bonwire. But it never forgot where it came from.


The Wataka Ashanti & Kente Socks: Carrying the Story Forward

It was this story — the spider's web, the royal loom, the stool that held a nation's soul, the woman who fired a gun into the air rather than yield — that stopped me in my tracks when I first went deep into the history of kente. The visual language of this cloth is so extraordinary, so intentional, so loaded with meaning in every stripe and every block of colour, that it felt impossible not to respond to it as a designer.

The Ashanti Socks and the Kente Socks are my response — machine knitted here in Cape Town, drawing on the geometry and colour logic of kente without trying to imitate or replace it. The Kente Socks take their cue directly from the strip-woven structure: interlocking blocks of gold, green, navy and red, the visual signature of Bonwire's looms. The Ashanti Socks reach into the broader kingdom — bold stepped red-and-cream patterns that echo the adinkra-adjacent geometry of the empire's visual world.

They are not kente. They are a designer's love letter to one of the world's great textile traditions, worn on your feet in Cape Town, Johannesburg, London, or wherever you happen to be.

Ashanti socks in burnt orange, black and cream
Ashanti Socks Shop now →
Ashanti socks in burnt orange, black and cream
Ashanti — detail Shop now →
Kente socks with red, gold, green, navy and cream
Kente Socks Shop now →
Kente socks with red, gold, green, navy and cream
Kente — detail Shop now →

Wear the Story

Available in sizes S–M (4–7) and M–L (7–11)

Buy any 4 pairs and your 5th is on us.

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Written by Gwyneth Parks

Gwyneth is the founder of Wataka — an African-inspired sock brand made in South Africa. Textile designer, storyteller, and creative entrepreneur driven by the belief that African design is among the most extraordinary on earth, and that it should be celebrated and worn!

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