27 Jan 2026
Beyond Milan and Como: Where Italian Fashion Is Actually Born

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Your Custom Journey

When The Devil Wears Prada 2 hits theaters on May 1, audiences will see Milan's Quadrilatero della Moda and Lake Como's Villa Balbiano as the backdrop for Miranda Priestly's return. A visually stunning portrayal of Italian fashion — yet one that tells only part of the story.

Your Custom Journey, the italian-based tour operator specializing in bespoke experiences for discerning American travelers, is launching a new collection of fashion-focused itineraries designed to reveal what the film cannot show: the regional landscapes, artisan traditions, and local cultures that have inspired generations of Italian designers.

"The film will portray Milan as Italy's fashion capital — and it certainly is, operationally speaking. But the creative DNA of these houses comes from somewhere else entirely" says Fabio Fasone, Team Director at Your Custom Journey and travel designer. "When Gianni Versace designed those Medusa heads, he was drawing on the Greek temples he walked past as a boy in Reggio Calabria. When Domenico Dolce envisions black lace and baroque drama, he's seeing his childhood in Polizzi Generosa. These are places American travelers can actually visit — and understand something profound about where Italian fashion truly comes from."


FASHION BORN FROM PLACE

Your Custom Journey's fashion itineraries trace the geographic origins of Italy's most celebrated designers, connecting travelers with the landscapes that shaped their aesthetic vision:

Calabria — The Versace Legacy. Gianni Versace grew up in Reggio Calabria, surrounded by the ruins of Magna Graecia — the Greek colonies that once flourished in Southern Italy. His mother's dressmaking atelier on Via Tommaso Gulli became his first classroom. The iconic Medusa logo was not simply a design choice: it emerged from the Hellenic mythology embedded in Calabrian culture. Travelers can visit the Riace Bronzes at the National Museum of Magna Graecia and understand why classical motifs became Versace's visual language.

Sicily — The Soul of Dolce & Gabbana. Domenico Dolce was born in Polizzi Generosa, a small town in the Madonie mountains near Palermo. The sensuality of Sicilian women, the drama of village festivals, the handwoven chiacchierino lace, the majolica ceramics of Caltagirone — these are not simply design influences but the living culture that defines every D&G collection. Your Custom Journey arranges access to the artisan workshops that still produce these materials, including the hand-painted ceramics that appear in the designers' most recognizable prints.

Pantelleria — The Armani Palette. Giorgio Armani discovered Pantelleria in 1981, an island of black volcanic rock suspended between Sicily and Tunisia. What initially struck him as "barren, surly, rough" became his creative sanctuary for over four decades. The Mediterranean light, the untamed landscape, the traditional dammusi stone houses — these elements informed the restrained elegance and earthy color palette that defined Armani's aesthetic. The fragrance Acqua di Giò was directly inspired by Pantelleria's terrain. Travelers can experience the island that taught a designer how to find beauty in restraint.

Rome — The Valentino Atelier. Valentino Garavani, who passed away earlier this month, built his maison in Rome beginning in 1959 on Via Condotti, with his legendary atelier at Palazzo Mignanelli still producing haute couture entirely by hand with a team of specialized seamstresses. His iconic red emerged from a formative moment at the opera in Barcelona, but it was Rome's eternal grandeur — the same city where Anne Hathaway's Andy Sachs will walk in the new film — that gave his designs their sense of timeless occasion.


WHAT THE FILM WON'T SHOW

Your Custom Journey's fashion itineraries are designed for travelers who want to understand Italian fashion, not simply see its surface. Rather than photographing the same storefronts, clients gain access to working artisan workshops, private textile archives, and regional traditions that remain invisible to conventional tourism.

"Fashion tourists typically visit Milan, perhaps Florence, and believe they've seen Italian fashion" adds Fasone. "But consider this: the natural color palettes of the Calabrian coast, the embroidered vestments of Sicilian village processions, the volcanic textures of Pantelleria's landscape — that's where the ideas come from. We help travelers trace that creative journey."


ABOUT YOUR CUSTOM JOURNEY

Founded in 1985 and based in Venice, Your Custom Journey creates approximately 180 bespoke Italian itineraries annually for American travelers seeking authentic cultural immersion. With a 30% repeat client rate and investments starting at $500 per person per day, the company operates through personal relationships with artisans, boutique hotels, and cultural figures rather than standard supplier networks. 

Fashion-focused itineraries are available for bookings beginning in 2026, with custom options ranging from single-region explorations to comprehensive journeys connecting multiple fashion capitals with their geographic origins.

For Travel Writers: Your Custom Journey welcomes inquiries from journalists interested in exploring the regional roots of Italian fashion. Press trip support available for editorial projects that examine fashion beyond its commercial centers.