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Pin-Up Perfection
Fashion designer Sara Battaglia loves a bit of flash. Known for her riotous, rainbow-bedecked handbags and equally slick clothing collection, this Milanese local is something of a style savant.
Photography: Chiara Quadri — Styling: La DoubleJ Team — Words: Laura Todd.
Fashion designer Sara Battaglia loves a bit of flash. Known for her riotous, rainbow-bedecked handbags and equally slick clothing collection, this Milanese local is something of a style savant.

In fashion circles (and to her legions of adoring Instagram followers) she’s one half of the #batsisters duo (elder Giovanna is fashion editor at Vogue Japan), the street style tour-de-force that has watchers wondering what kind of sartorial magic runs through the fabled Battaglia DNA. But the younger Battaglia is far more than just her fashion week looks. Her inimitable eye for tone and detail has seen her line of clothing and handbags shoot to the top of Milan’s must-have list since its debut six years ago.




I design for women who want to be glamorous all day

When I saw the bar,” Battaglia declares, of the red lacquer built-in number complete with mirrored walls and red velvet stools, “I knew the flat had to be mine.” It’s easy to imagine Battaglia behind the wood, cocktail shaker in hand, orchestrating a swinging soiree for her inner circle of fashionable friends. But she insists it’s not a party pad. “I’ve only had one, maybe two, dinner parties since I moved in.” The well appointed apartment conveniently caters to the quieter life as well. A red marble soaker tub in the master bathroom has, Battaglia admits, “added a few extra minutes to my morning routine.
For the fashion frenzied, the flat does not disappoint. Miles of Alaia, Miu Miu and Prada pumps line the walls, mingling with rough-and-ready Dr. Marten combat boots and lived in Gucci loafers. Vintage Gaultier — which she collects — rubs shoulders with neatly tailored dresses from the 50s and 60s and straight off the runway Junya Watanabe. Inside a Louis Vuitton steamer trunk she uses as a coffee table a veritable treasure trove of accessories are discovered: gold and glittery costume jewelry sits side-by-side oversized baubles and novelty sunglasses. It’s so much a fabulous fashion playground, Battaglia even operates it as a showroom for her collection during fashion week. “We transform it,” she describes of her intimate presentations, “move the sofas, add mannequins and — voila — it’s a handbag parlor.” Asked about her goals for the future in the tough fashion industry, Battaglia doesn’t mince words about her planned ascent. “I’m like a little fish in the ocean with sharks right now,” she laughs in response, “but, soon enough, I’ll be a shark as well.” – Laura Todd

When I saw the bar,” Battaglia declares, of the red lacquer built-in number complete with mirrored walls and red velvet stools, “I knew the flat had to be mine.” It’s easy to imagine Battaglia behind the wood, cocktail shaker in hand, orchestrating a swinging soiree for her inner circle of fashionable friends. But she insists it’s not a party pad. “I’ve only had one, maybe two, dinner parties since I moved in.” The well appointed apartment conveniently caters to the quieter life as well. A red marble soaker tub in the master bathroom has, Battaglia admits, “added a few extra minutes to my morning routine.
For the fashion frenzied, the flat does not disappoint. Miles of Alaia, Miu Miu and Prada pumps line the walls, mingling with rough-and-ready Dr. Marten combat boots and lived in Gucci loafers. Vintage Gaultier — which she collects — rubs shoulders with neatly tailored dresses from the 50s and 60s and straight off the runway Junya Watanabe. Inside a Louis Vuitton steamer trunk she uses as a coffee table a veritable treasure trove of accessories are discovered: gold and glittery costume jewelry sits side-by-side oversized baubles and novelty sunglasses. It’s so much a fabulous fashion playground, Battaglia even operates it as a showroom for her collection during fashion week. “We transform it,” she describes of her intimate presentations, “move the sofas, add mannequins and — voila — it’s a handbag parlor.” Asked about her goals for the future in the tough fashion industry, Battaglia doesn’t mince words about her planned ascent. “I’m like a little fish in the ocean with sharks right now,” she laughs in response, “but, soon enough, I’ll be a shark as well.” – Laura Todd