If you missed Part 1 on the centenary candle, you can find it here, and Part 2 on the Londolozi 100th Apron here.
Which brings us to the third piece of the Londolozi 100th year merchandise story. Some centenary pieces began at a kitchen table. Others began with a scent, an attempt to bottle the essence of safari. This one began with a question we couldn’t quite let go of:
If the Living Boutique has the reach to sell a hundred years of story, what else could that reach do while it’s at it?
That question is where this piece begins. Not with a sock. With a decision about what a sock could mean.
The Long Route
Like the apron before it, this piece did not begin with a supplier search. It began, as so much does at Londolozi, with a guest.
Londolozi Guest, Brett Dawson, has been visiting the reserve for over 20 years. Many of you might recognise his daughter, Shannon Dawson, who first joined Londolozi as a camp manager in 2020 and has been part of the Marketing team since 2022. Her brother, Matthew, is currently training to be a Londolozi guide.
It was in passing, the way these things tend to happen at Londolozi, that Brett mentioned a South African sock company doing something rather remarkable in their approach.
That mention found its way to the marketing team, when Shannon reached out to me and to Qudi from Sexy Socks to introduce the idea, sensing that there might be some real synergy worth exploring between the two brands. The introduction included the same background Londolozi shares with any brand it hopes to walk alongside, rather than pitch to: a stand-alone, family-run game reserve approaching its 100th year, built on authentic relationships with the land, the wildlife, and the people who live at and visit Londolozi. A family business drawn, always, to partnering with brands that share that same commitment to quality, sustainability, and genuine craftsmanship.
Not long after, Qudi and Shannon spoke for the first time, to kick-start the conversation and flesh out the idea more concretely. There was no rush to land on an answer. We wanted a partnership that could carry the full weight of a hundred years, not just a logo stamped on a stock item. It took some back and forth, and a first sample to get right, before we arrived at the version now sitting on the shelves of the Living Boutique. Some things are worth taking the long route to get right. For some, a sock. For us, a sock woven with a story, carrying memory with every step, is representative of the Londolozi experience.
The Design
Roxy Pingo, Londolozi’s Graphic Designer, took the brief from Bronwyn Varty-Laburn and Shan Varty, and the challenge she was handed was a particular one: bring in the Londolozi 100th design elements and the essence of the logo, without putting an actual logo on a sock. Drawing inspiration from the traditional shweshwe design, one of South Africa’s most storied fabric traditions, Roxy used the Londolozi logo as the central geometric pattern.
Shweshwe dates back to the 1800s and has, over generations, become far more than cloth. Traditionally cotton, block-printed with intricate, geometric patterns, it carries cultural identity and pride the way few textiles do anywhere in the world. It felt right, and quintessentially South African, to let that weave inform the mark on a Londolozi centenary piece, rather than simply printing a logo onto a sock and calling it a day.
The colour is a deep, considered green, chosen deliberately to run parallel with the emerald of the Londolozi 100th Apron. Two very different garments, stitched from the same intention. The emerald is the canopy at the height of summer, that deep, rain-fed green that feels almost impossibly alive, a note carried over from the Apron and echoed again here.
Practically, the sock is one size fits most, tested against the feet of our own rangers and trackers, and made from 90% cotton and 10% spandex for comfort on long days and longer drives. The packaging carries the centenary logo front and centre, with a QR code that leads, fittingly, right back to this blog. A small loop closed: buy the sock, land on the story.
A Sock for a Sock
The long route that led us to Sexy Socks, a social enterprise designing and manufacturing in South Africa, was a lead worth exploring. Much like a tracker following a seemingly unpromising track and being rewarded with a sighting.
Their model is disarmingly simple:
For every pair sold, a pair of school socks is donated to a child in need. Over one million pairs given, and, in their words, they’re just getting started.
Their mission reads almost like something we could have written ourselves:
A world where everyday choices drive meaningful change, one pair of socks at a time. Community. Kindness. Integrity. Inclusivity.
These are not marketing words to Sexy Socks; they are the operating instructions. It is easy to say a purchase can do good. It is harder to build a business where it actually, mechanically, always does.

As Dave Hutchison, MD and founder of Sexy Socks, puts it:
“Not only does every sale make a tangible difference in quite literally warming feet (and hearts), but it also affords us the chance to meet incredible teachers and children who we hope to inspire through our work, showing that business can be used as a force for good and for change in our immediate communities. This is our why. They are our why.”
Read that again, and you will hear an echo of everything the Londolozi Ripple Fund and the Good Work Foundation stand for – the belief that spending power, used with intention, is a form of care. We have never seen consumerism and conservation as opposites. Done properly, one can fund the other. Sexy Socks understands this in their bones, which is exactly why this partnership felt less like a sourcing decision and more like finding kin.
Londolozi is built on the idea that we leave things better than we found them, the protector of all living things. A sock that quietly funds a child’s first pair of school socks is not a stretch from that. It is the whole philosophy, just worn a little closer to the ground.
First Steps
Like most of our centenary range, we launched on the 1st of January 2026. Every ranger and tracker was gifted a pair ahead of the first game drive of our hundredth year, and the team who worked New Year’s Eve went home with a pair of their own. Warm feet, before a single sale had even been made.
That was the main objective behind bringing socks into our centennial merchandise: to extend beyond the tangible and be representative of something bigger. A ripple effect, in some ways. For every pair bought by Londolozi and then sold to a guest at the boutique, a child somewhere in South Africa has a pair too.
The Extra Steps
With “one size fits most” as the sizing guide, this size curve sadly left out the little ones, and at Londolozi, children are the custodians of the future. With this in mind, we connected again with Sexy Socks to create the Cubs Den versions. Following a similar path to the 100th year sock, we incorporated the Cubs Den leopard logo and landed on two colourways, stone and olive, to gift to every child who comes on safari to Londolozi.
If you would like to bring a piece of Londolozi’s centenary year home with you, with the knowledge of its ripple effect still moving outward, the 100th sock is available for purchase from the Living Boutique.










Tea towels! Hand towels! Bath towels! With the original Londolozi logo on!! I would buy them all!