Brunello Cucinelli BC Duo Bag Campaign
/Brunello Cucinelli BC Duo Bag Campaign Is a New Vision for a Feminine Ideal AOC Fashion
The Brunello Cucinelli fashion business is built on the Italian values of humanism — a philosophy that AOC embraces fully now and always in my life. I am now clear in my own mind what other Italian-origin forces exist in opposition to humanism and are running wild across the US federal government.
I keep reading about alleged brilliance at work, but these beliefs run scarily close to the Italian poet Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, who published the "Manifesto of Futurism" in 1909.
AOC first wrote about the Manifesto in the 2016 Democratic primary, and it’s now thriving in the Trump administration, where it unites the far left and far right far closer than we want to admit.
This is not the moment to derail a focus on Brunello Cucinelli’s new BC Duo bag ad campaign — and the Chris Colls [IG] images that resonate deeply with my morning reading. Yes, there’s way more to the narrative, but this is the way of the universe if one’s mind is open to receive.
And in their own words, the Cucinelli family invites me to do so. They also understand what I am saying.
The BC Duo bag celebrates the inseparable union between the brand's two iconic initials, with an ideal embrace that unites the history, taste and philosophy of Brunello Cucinelli.
Sisters at Work
The Brunello Cucinelli business is a family one with his two daughters – Carolina and Camilla Cucinelli – serving as vice presidents and creative co-directors. They are living and working in Solomeo with their own families — and husbands, who are also part of the business.
The house’s ‘BC Duo’ handbag represents a bit of a torch-passing moment, as the first bag to be designed by the Cucinelli daughters. The softly-structured tote might be the quintessential ‘ladies’ bag, especially the largest of the four sizes, which appeals to our own ‘throw in anything I might need today’ mentality.
Models Rim Tekle and Tara Halliwell together symbolize the purity of the feminine ideal in Brunello Cucinelli’s world. I will leave that statement hanging to give it oxygen, rather than death by asphyxiation. ~ Anne