§ 01 Product. Ayana · Mug · 23,00 USD
AK · 02 · Ayana 01 / 04 Ayana · ayana_ak-mug-001
AK · Nº 2 / 19 Ayana · Niamey, Níger

Ayana.

Mug

A mug with the portrait of Ayana, the West African giraffe, and a colored interior. For coffee, tea, or whatever you drink while you wait or while you work past two in the morning. Ceramic, dishwasher safe. Made to order.

Printing
All-over, vibrant and washableAOP DTG · sublimation
Production
Cut and sewn in 3–7 daysOn demand · no stock
Shipping
Worldwide with trackingUSA / Latvia
Warranty
Defective? We reprint itAt no extra cost
23,00 USD Tax included · white-label
01
§ 02 The real species. Giraffa camelopardalis peralta · West African giraffe
West African giraffe en su hábitat · Giraffa camelopardalis peralta
The real species

West African giraffe.

Giraffa camelopardalis peralta

Memory doesn't live in archives. It lives in the voice of whoever tells it again.

Open savanna and wooded savanna of the Sahel and East Africa: from Niger and Chad to Ethiopia, Uganda and South Sudan. The West African subspecies lives exclusively in the Kouré area (Niger), in savanna with acacias, combretum and balanites, at altitudes of 0 to 2,000 m.

§ 03 The story behind the portrait. 3 min · 02 chapters
I
CAP · 01 / 02

First round

This mug of Ayana, the West African giraffe, is a ceramic mug with a colored interior and the portrait printed on the outside. For coffee, for tea, for whatever you drink at seven in the morning or two in the morning. An everyday object with no pretension beyond that: something to hold in your hands that also has a story behind it.

In Kouré, sixty kilometers from Niamey, green tea is served in three rounds. It's the social protocol for every field visit — nothing important is discussed until the tea has been drunk. The first round is bitter, strong, concentrated. The second brings the intensity down. The third is sweet. The host brews the tea on a small stove, pours it from a height to make it foam, and serves it in tiny glass cups that burn your fingers. No rush. You can't rush. Skipping the ritual means skipping the conversation.

Ayana has been doing that ritual before every recording for twelve years. A documentary filmmaker for oral heritage at the Centre Culturel Oumarou Ganda in Niamey, she coordinates an archive project that collects the stories of communities living alongside the last giraffes of West Africa. Sixty-seven sources, one hundred and eighty hours recorded. And before every recorded hour, three glasses of tea.

II
CAP · 02 / 02

The time it takes to wait

In the early years she tried to cut it short. It didn't work. The communities of Kouré have their own rhythm, and that rhythm isn't up for negotiation. Trust doesn't come with a recorder switched on and a polished introduction. It comes with time, with repeated presence, with sitting quietly and accepting what's put in front of you. Ayana learned that fieldwork starts long before you press the record button.

At home, in her apartment in Niamey's Plateau neighborhood, the ritual is different but the logic is the same. She works at night. Sleeps five or six hours, broken by fifteen-minute naps that reset her. Eats little and often: dates, peanuts, pieces of wagashi cheese between transcriptions. Drinks a lot of liquid at once, a few times a day. Two in the morning, headphones on, the voice of an elderly Zarma man describing the first time he saw a giraffe. Ayana falls asleep with the pencil in her hand. At quarter past two she wakes up, jots down three words, and carries on.

That kind of work needs something warm on the table. Not as a metaphor. As a physical fact. At two in the morning in Niamey, the nights drop in temperature — during the harmattan, the dry cold from the Sahara comes through the third-floor windows and your hands go cold before the rest of your body does. A cup of hot tea is the difference between staying up to transcribe and leaving it for tomorrow.

§ 04 Technical specs. Category · pod
Material & composition
Cerámica con interior de color · sublimación exterior
Production
Print provider: PrintfulProduction method: sublimationProduction time: 2–7 busin
Care & maintenance
Apta para microondas y lavavajillas según indicaciones Printful. Evitar choque t
Shipping & timing
Shipping category: mug
§ 06 More of Ayana. 08 objects · same author
§ 07 What people ask. 08 · about POD
  • Each product is made to order when you place your purchase. There is no pre-made stock or overproduction. A specialised production partner prints, cuts, and prepares it specifically for you.
  • Production normally takes 2-5 business days. Shipping adds 3 to 20 days depending on destination. Most orders arrive within 1-3 weeks total. Exact times depend on the production facility and your location.
  • Contact us at mail@yagopartal.com with your order number and clear photos of the damage (include packaging). We will review your case and offer a solution as soon as possible, either replacement or refund.
  • Yes. At checkout you can enter a different shipping address from billing. The package arrives white-label with no visible price, so the recipient will not see the cost.
  • If you notice a print defect (misaligned colours, stains, missing ink areas), contact us with photos at mail@yagopartal.com. Production defects are resolved with a replacement at no extra cost.
  • AI is a tool within the creative process, not the process itself. Yago directs each portrait: researching the species, designing the character, and manually selecting and editing the result. The artistic decision is always human.
  • Yes. You will receive an email with a tracking number when your order ships from production. If your order ships in multiple packages, you will get a separate tracking number for each one.
  • Animal Kinhood is a series of anthropomorphic animal portraits created by Yago Partal. Each portrait features a real species dressed in clothing that reflects its personality, blending photography, illustration, and artificial intelligence.