Angelo Lapiccirella
Milan
With Fabrique since 2025
Works
Background
20-year veteran from Dolce&Gabbana, MSGM, Max Mara; his sculptural designs grace Zendaya's CFDA red carpet, Hailey Bieber's street style, Bella Hadid's viral "office siren" looks.
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Angelo Lapiccirella has built his career on a fundamental truth: Italian design succeeds because it refuses categorization. Nearly 20 years into his journey, the Milan-based designer carries credentials from Sicily's Dolce&Gabbana to metropolitan MSGM, Alpine-born Kristina Ti, refined St. John, and Max Mara. This geographic sweep across Italy's fashion territories wasn't accidental—it cultivated the multicultural foundation that makes his work impossible to pin down. "This is the soul of Italian design," he explains, describing how exquisite craftsmanship bridges the gap between fleeting trends and what people actually need to wear.
His garments function as flowing sculptures, establishing deliberate tension between baroque romantic pleating and minimalist sharp cuts. When metallic visual effects collide with workwear denim, the result demonstrates his core methodology: making futuristic elements coexist with traditional craftsmanship. This boundary-crossing approach explains why his designs transcend red carpet moments to become wardrobe essentials for high-profile clients across industries. Zendaya's CFDA Fashion Awards look, Hailey Bieber's deconstructed street style that stops photographers, and Bella Hadid's trendsetting "office siren" styling all feature his work—not just for events, but as personal favorites they reach for repeatedly.
His latest Fabrique collaboration captures a specific transformation: the golden hour moment when a career woman leaves her office for a private terrace garden. She sheds her sharp-edged blazer, adds luxurious jewelry and elegant heels, then makes her entrance dressed for celebration. "It's about that shift from work mode to personal power," Lapiccirella notes. This understanding of how clothing functions in real life—beyond the fantasy—continues reshaping what luxury means today. As fashion moves toward authenticity over spectacle, his influence keeps expanding.
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Fabs