What is the one garment or accessory that you consider to be absolutely essential in your wardrobe? And as a designer, is there a particular piece you often begin with when building a look or even an entire collection?Practicality — alongside your brand’s signature tailoring excellence and undeniable coolness — seems to be a central element. How do you balance your own creative vision and personal approach to daily fashion with the needs of your target women and the constant, often overwhelming, flow of ever-changing fashion trends?
For me, it’s actually quite simple and straightforward: the collection is designed around myself and my habits — what I like, what I’d want to wear — or around my friends. So the commercial aspect comes naturally, because if there’s a demand coming from real women, it all becomes much easier, I understand it firsthand. I have an obsession with boots — they’ve become quite the symbol of the brand. The entire collection often revolves around them. There’s always a variation of them in each season: reinterpreted, deconstructed, done in suede — many different takes on the same one core idea. What really matters to me is the context in which this woman lives and how she is presented. Rather than creating pieces that feel out of context — overly extravagant to the point of being unwearable or undesirable — I focus on authenticity. I design based on what I would want to wear. The goal is to highlight the woman behind the clothes — her world, her creative environment, her passions. For this reason, we don’t have a marketing team — everything just flows naturally from that vision.
Looking ahead to the future evolution of the brand, what are your goals for Durazzi in the coming seasons — and for your own creative journey? Should we be expecting a first, exceptional runway show sometime soon? More broadly, what are the values, messages, thoughts, or impressions you hope to leave with those who experience your collections or attend your presentations?
I’m not obsessed with fashion shows — it’s not a goal I’m trying to reach honestly. To me, that format feels like déjà vu. On the contrary, I really love the impact of performance — both for the exchange it creates and for the deeper sense of immersion it allows. I also like that the audience doesn’t have to wait; they arrive and immediately experience something.I truly enjoy exhibitions, and that’s exactly the message I want to convey. Maybe in the future, instead of a traditional show, it could evolve into a larger-scale presentation. I’m obsessed with art for art’s sake — even if I’m not collaborating with artists, it’s really about the feeling you get when you see an exhibition and what it communicates. That’s my goal with my collections: to make people feel like they’ve been transported into my world. Of course, it would be amazing to expand this format into something bigger, but for now, a fashion show isn’t my wish. I don’t even know if there will ever be one. I want people to walk away from a presentation feeling overwhelmed by creativity and immersed in something truly unique — the same feeling you get from a powerful art exhibition. For me, it’s not just about the clothing itself, but also about the person wearing it — it’s about transmitting a vision that goes beyond the garment. Creativity, to me must never strip away the identity of the person wearing the piece — because at the core of it all is the human being. In the end, it’s always about who wears the clothes, and finding the right balance — without it turning into a circus. It shouldn’t be just about creativity, but also about identification and connection.