Italian-trained perception stylist. I teach women to read what they already own, so getting dressed stops being a panic and you can walk into any room with confidence.
Eight years on-set styling for the Today Show. An accessory line that dressed Emmy winners. Twenty-five years dressing women in Milan and on camera.
Fab in the studio, Spring 2026
I grew up in Milan in a household where my parents left for a black-tie event the night I was born. My grandparents were interior designers. My mother taught me that charming is more important than pretty, and I have built every chapter of my work around that sentence since.
I built and sold an accessory line that dressed Emmy winners. I spent eight years on the Today Show set, dressing women on camera. Now I take the secrets I used to dress the stars and teach them to everyday women, in their own closets.
This is the place I teach it.
Style is personal, but knowledge is what makes it intentional. - Fab
Teaching you the methods I used to dress Emmy winners on set, women on the Today Show before a live segment, and private clients in their own homes.
Price is the worst tell of quality. A pair of jeans at Old Navy can be worth more than a pair at Bloomingdale's, and once you learn to read fabric, construction, and the curve of a seam, you stop trusting the price tag to do the thinking for you.
Before color, before silhouette, before any accessory, there is an identity. The same dress on two different women is two different dresses. Once you know which one you are, every other choice gets shorter.
Forget season palettes. There are three categories of color, and one rule for how far apart they should sit in an outfit. Indispensable, intermediate, impactful. Learn the rule once, use it for the next thirty years.
A five-foot pear and a six-foot pear wear the same outfit two different ways. Body-shape charts cannot see that. The Italian eye reads real estate, lines, where the light lands. Once you see it, you cannot unsee it.
The reason five basics can become twenty outfits, not five. The part I built a business around, dressing women for the Today Show and for camera. Most women treat accessories as a finishing touch. I treat them as the engine.
Dress for the person you are becoming.
Something has shifted. Your work, your body, your identity. Your reflection has changed but your closet hasn't yet caught up - this is where our work together begins.
For the woman whose wardrobe needs to catch up with her position. The promotion, the new chapter, the season of being seen.
A full closet audit, a custom wardrobe build, and a season of direct access to my eye. Taking on a small number of private one-on-one engagements each year, by application only.
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