Get Ready to See Every Fashion Editor Wearing This Brand

From the moment stylish Italian duo Giorgia Tordini and Gilda Ambrosio launched the inaugural designs for their Milan-based label Attico, it was a hit. The street style stars know what's cool and what fashion girls want to wear, which explains the label's instant popularity. (It's a regular sellout on Net-a-Porter, Matches Fashion, and everywhere else that stocks it.) The effortlessly cool loungewear-as-outerwear aesthetic of its stunning duster-length slip dresses and robes has become a street style staple in recent seasons, and the duo is fittingly branching out into accessories, tops, denim, and footwear, meaning that fashion girls will soon be able to deck themselves out in Attico.

Moda Operandi is currently holding a trunk sale for the brand's S/S 17 collection. The gorgeous embellished pouches, velvet pumps, high-waisted jeans, sequin-adorned pieces, and fringed robe are standouts, but it was one accessory in particular that caught our eye, and it's sure to be polarizing. Buckled ankle cuffs (which can also be worn as bracelets) are being sold in sets of two in velvet, satin, and embellished options. We're predicting that this unique accessory will turn up on the ankles of stylish Attico fans at the next fashion week, with Tordini and Ambrosio leading the way.

Keep scrolling to preorder the ankle cuffs before Moda Operandi's trunk show ends later this week!

What do you think of the ankle cuffs? Would you wear them? Tell us in the comments below!

Opening Image: Style du Monde

Allyson Payer
Senior Editor

Allyson is a senior editor for Who What Wear. She joined the company in 2014 as co-founder Katherine Power's executive assistant and over the years has written hundreds of stories for Who What Wear. Prior to her career in fashion, Allyson worked in the entertainment industry at companies such as Sony Pictures Television. Allyson is now based in Raleigh, North Carolina, and is originally from Baton Rouge, Louisiana. She holds a BFA in theater. Her path to fashion may not have been linear, but based on the number of fashion magazines she collected as a child and young adult, it was meant to be.