Bianca Frusi
Photographer: Riccardo Dall'Amico @dallamico
www.dallamico.it
Model/Makeup Artist/Hair Stylist: Bianca Frusi @biancafrusi
https://wwe.bisncafrusi.com
Wardrobe Stylist/Creative Director: Nausicaa Frusi @nau_ph
In a muted space between shadow and softness, the gothic Japanese lolita aesthetic becomes an inner language.
Lace is not decoration, but shelter. Black is not darkness, but depth.
This vision moves through fragility without fear, embracing decay as a quiet form of beauty. There is innocence, but never naivety.
Each detail feels intentional, almost ritualistic, holding together grace and gravity.
The image lingers in a suspended moment, where elegance carries weight and delicacy becomes a form of strength.
A beauty that doesn’t ask to be understood, only felt.
Your style is deeply inspired by gothic Japanese lolita. What draws you to this aesthetic?
It feels like a safe structure for emotions. It allows softness and darkness to exist together without cancelling each other. I don’t wear it to escape reality, but to face it more honestly.
Fragility is a strong presence in your imagery. How do you relate to it?
I see fragility as awareness, not weakness. Being sensitive means noticing things others overlook. I try to protect that feeling instead of hiding it.
There’s a sense of decay in your work, but it feels gentle rather than tragic. Why?
Because decay doesn’t always mean an ending. Sometimes it’s just a quiet transition. I’m interested in that in-between state, where things are changing but still holding on.
Your beauty feels ethereal, yet serious. How would you define it?
It’s not light or playful. It’s calm, intentional, and a bit heavy. I like beauty that stays with you, not just something pretty to look at.
If this editorial had a feeling, what would it be?
A soft stillness. The kind that feels fragile, but very real.

