The digital world knows her as ‘Pizza Colors’, a vibrant fashion and beauty content creator commanding attention across Instagram and TikTok. Off-screen, her name is Temusa Mbingo, though most people call her Taylor.
Beneath the layers of avant-garde styling lies a background that often catches her followers off guard. “A fun fact that surprises people is that I am a PK (Pastor’s kid). I studied Economics and Statistics in university,” she reveals. Growing up, Mbingo found herself instinctively drawn to the unique and the unconventional.
“This inner drive led her to experiment with various aesthetics in a deeply personal quest for self-expression. However, pioneering a distinct visual identity came with its challenges. Most people don’t understand my style and I was bullied for a while because of it, but that only made me sassier,” Mbingo says, reflecting on the resilience that shaped her.
Every creator operates on a distinct frequency of strengths and weaknesses. For Mbingo, her primary strength lies in conceptual vision, the ability to see an item for more than its surface value and transform an ordinary outfit into a definitive fashion statement.
Conversely, her self-professed weakness is an intense perfectionist streak. She admits that collaborating with others can prove challenging because she requires execution to match the exact imagery held in her mind. When asked to define her sartorial philosophy in just three words, Mbingo chooses deliberately: Expressive. Layered. Creative.
ART OF REPURPOSED WARDROBE
Mbingo rejects the industrial cycle of fast fashion, advocating instead for sustainable ingenuity. Her style matrix operates on a strict rule of versatility. “You cannot wear one thing one way - there has to be multiple ways to wear a piece of clothing,” she insists.
“The only way not to run out of clothes to wear is to find alternative ways of wearing them. This method is convenient, I get to wear the same clothes but because I wear it differently, it looks a different type of good each time,” she added.
This ethos manifests in a radical approach to garments. Mbingo frequently wears items entirely out of context: a skirt becomes a top, a jacket transforms into a skirt, trousers serve as a scarf, hair extensions function as a tie and a standard shirt is reimagined as a skirt. “If something can be worn another way, I don’t see the point of only wearing it the conventional way,” she explains.
Her styling choices follow a strict daily manifesto: dress to stand out, because the phrase ‘too much’ does not exist.
For Mbingo, clothing is a tool to ensure one is remembered and completely expressive. This expression remains tethered to her emotional state. Her mood dictates her outfit and her colour choices remain entirely dependent on how she feels. “I would never be able to wear yellow when I woke up on the wrong side of the bed,” she admits, noting that yellow remains the most challenging hue for her to style.
Conversely, certain colour combinations never fail her, including red and beige, maroon and cream, pink and orange and classic black and white. She finds particular joy in clash styling, pairing colours that theoretically should conflict, such as purple and green.
Behind this creative confidence stands a foundational mentor. “My number one inspiration since I was young has always been my mom,” Mbingo says.
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