
The Attico Fall 2025 Ready-to-Wear Collection
Consistency? Cute in concept. But The Attico's designers see it differently: as a velvet trap. Gilda Ambrosio and Giorgia Tordini prioritize evolution over expectation, freedom over formula. Change your mind, your mood, your look. Be whoever you want. No guilt—just reinvention, on your own terms. 'We don't believe in a one-note women, and we design for their contradictions,' they said. In an industry where female design leaders remain shockingly few, their perspective rings with authenticity— fashion driven by the female gaze, not by approval. Intrigued by tension, they went sharper and less languid this season—vintage decadence turned angular, body-con appeal gave way to concision, and pragmatism. The vibe was urban and assertive. Broad-shouldered, low-slung tailoring grounded the collection and straight-leg, thigh-high black leather boots were styled under everything: a flapper-turned-minimalist jersey minidress with an asymmetrical ruched hem, a taut stretchy strapless top, a side-slit, net-sequined slender dress.
Blazers came oversized, layered over cropped trumpet pants and sexy heels. Furry knitwear in saccharine shades appeared soft, but up close, the texture was felted, raw. Mongolian lamb chubbies and jacquard snake motifs hinted at a primal, instinctive allure. A bustier dress was intricately crocheted from ribbons that unraveled into long, swaying fringes, undulating with every seductive movement. Sensuality remains The Attico's hallmark—no matter how sharp their edge or grounded their realism.
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