In July 2023, Vogue proclaimed that Sarah Jessica Parker—long associated with Fendi’s iconic Baguette bag—was straying from her favourite. Despite owning one of the most envious Baguette collections of all time, the Sex and the City star was spotted carrying a ’90s-style rectangular crystal mesh bag that wasn’t from the Roman maison. It turned out, the purse she had been photographed sporting on several occasions was the Vitty by Italian label Benedetta Bruzziches.
Bruzziches—whose fanciful creations are favoured by party girls all over the world including celebrities Margot Robbie, Hailey Bieber, and Winnie Harlow—wasn’t always an accessory designer. At 23, while she was designing garments, a chance encounter with an Indian entrepreneur in an elevator during a leather trade show in Italy brought her to India. “I had never made bags before that moment, but I wanted to move to India because I had been there on a school trip and loved it. I went back home and said to my mother, ‘Mom, I’m going to India to work for a guy I met in an elevator.’ She thought I was crazy,” she recalls. But after a quick background check, a young, ambitious Bruzziches packed her suitcases and moved to Tamil Nadu, where she learned how to design and create leather bags for a brand called Calonge. “I learned the job sitting on the floor with women who spoke only Tamil. It was magical—because we could communicate despite not speaking the same language. One of them, Usha, is one of my greatest friends. She doesn’t speak one word of English, but we keep calling each other and laughing on the phone!”
On her return to Italy, she started her eponymous brand with a mission to create whimsical bags that couldn’t be found elsewhere at the time. Inspiration for her designs, she says, comes from within. “My best friend Barbara says that I use the bags as a form of therapy because they help me exercise what I feel inside. I think it’s also helped me build a connection with the women who buy my bags, who may feel the same way or have been through similar experiences,” she says. Designing, for her, is a release, a paradise, and her happy place.