The Nonna Behind Every Bag: The Suitcase Story

In 1997, Rosa had to choose what to bring to America. She left her clothes, her photos, her wedding dress. She brought her grandmother's tools. Then everything almost burned away.

Rosa Rossi with the tools she carried across an ocean. Photographed last spring in her atelier.

The story of Rosa, a woman who left everything behind in Florence, lost almost everything again in America, and was brought back to her craft by the small hands of her granddaughter.

 

50,000+ studio-made bags. Each one shaped by traditions that remember Florence.

A Life in Florence

For twenty-five years, Rosa was the woman with the leather-touch in Oltrarno. Her tiny bottega sat across the Arno, two doors from the bakery, and everyone in the neighborhood knew the soft tap of her hammer through the open window.


She had opened the shop in 1972, at twenty-five, with nothing but her grandmother Nonna Lucia's old leatherworking tools and the stubborn belief that her craft could build a life.
 

By 1997, Rosa was fifty. Her bags were carried by women across Florence. Her husband Antonio came home every evening to the smell of leather and espresso. Her life was small, beautiful, and exactly where she belonged.

Rosa's bottega in Oltrarno. The window everyone in the neighborhood walked past for twenty-five years.

The Phone Call That Changed Everything

It was a Tuesday morning in March 1997. Rosa was bent over a half-finished bag when the phone rang. It was her son Marco, calling from Boston.

 

"Mama," he said. "Sarah is pregnant. You're going to be a Nonna. Will you come?"

 

Within four months, Rosa was packing. The airline allowed her one suitcase. Twenty kilos. That was all of Florence she could take with her.

 

She made piles on the workbench: her clothes, her wedding photos, her wedding dress, her mother's cookbook. And in the corner of the room, on the floor where they had always lived: Nonna Lucia's heavy leatherworking tools. Eleven kilograms of iron, wood, and brass.

Twenty kilos. A lifetime in piles on the floor.

Rosa's Personal Collection
Is Now Available

Artisan-finished by Rosa

Clearance sale live now

Free shipping within the USA

VISIT NONNA'S BOUTIQUE

"I bought one of Rosa's bags after reading her story, and I can't explain how it felt when I held it. You can feel the years, the love, the quiet strength in every stitch. It's more than just a bag. It's like carrying someone's legacy."

- Marissa

Verified Customer

Arrival in a Strange Country

She closed her eyes and heard Nonna Lucia's voice from forty years before: "The memory forgets. The tools never do."

 

She packed the tools first. Then folded two dresses on top. Everything else stayed in Florence.

 

America was colder than she imagined. Louder. Faster. Rosa didn't speak the language. She couldn't read the signs. For months, she barely left Marco's apartment.

 

Then in November, Sarah went into labor. Eleven hours later, Rosa held her granddaughter for the first time. A tiny, perfect girl. Giulia.

 

That same week, Rosa opened the suitcase. Six weeks later she had made her first American bag: a tiny christening bag for Giulia, soft enough to hold a blessing candle. By 2003, she had opened her first small storefront, ten minutes from Marco's house. Antonio flew in from Florence to hand-paint the sign: "Fatto con amore. Made with love."

The first time Rosa held Giulia. The night the tools came out of the closet.

The Night Everything Burned

For three years, Rosa stitched in her small American shop, slowly building a life. Then on a January night in 2006, the phone rang at 2 a.m.


The shop was on fire.

 

By the time Rosa arrived, the front of the building was already gone. Inside: every bag she had made that year, every meter of leather, the workbench Antonio had built her, and the suitcase with Nonna Lucia's tools, the same tools that had crossed an ocean nine years before.

 

The firefighter handed her a small charred box pulled from the back. Inside were the

brass thimbles, blackened but whole. The cutting knife was gone. The awls were gone. Everything else was gone. 

 

Rosa sat on the curb in the cold and didn't cry. She just stared at the brass thimbles in her hands. That night, something inside her went quiet.

A few brass thimbles. That was all that survived.

The Quiet Years

Rosa didn't pick up a needle for nine years.

 

She told Marco the leather no longer felt like leather. She told Antonio, before he passed in 2008, that her hands had forgotten the way. The brass thimbles sat in a drawer. The shop stayed closed.

 

Giulia grew up watching her Nonna grow smaller. Quieter. Less herself.

 

Then one Saturday morning in 2015, fifteenyear-old Giulia walked into Rosa's kitchen carrying a small piece of leather and one of the brass thimbles. "Nonna," she said. "Teach me. Please."
 

Rosa shook her head. "Bambina, I can't."

 

Giulia placed the thimble in Rosa's hand and closed her fingers around it. "Nonna Lucia taught you. Now you teach me. The tools know the way."
 

Rosa looked at her granddaughter, this fifteen-year-old girl quoting the words of a woman she had never met, and something inside her woke up after nine long years.

"Nonna Lucia taught you. Now you teach me." - The morning Rosa picked up a needle again.

Threads of Healing

The first bag Rosa made after the fire wasn't perfect. Her hands trembled. She had to stop three times to remember the way her grandmother had taught her to hold the awl.


But when she finished, something quiet and proud lit inside her chest for the first time in nine years.

 

Giulia became her first apprentice. Then her partner. Together they sourced new leather, rebuilt the workbench, found a new storefront, and slowly, stitch by stitch, brought Nonna's Boutique back to life.


Word spread. The women who had bought from Rosa before the fire returned. They brought their daughters. "This bag," Rosa would say, holding her work, "is made with hands that remember Florence, and a granddaughter who remembered me."

Stitch by stitch, Rosa came back to herself. Giulia was beside her every day.

What Nonna Brought With Her

Today, Rosa is seventy-eight. Giulia is twenty-eight. They work side by side, every single day.


The brass thimbles, the only things that survived the fire, sit on the workbench between them. Every bag they make is stitched with one of those thimbles on a thumb.


What Rosa brought from Florence in that suitcase wasn't tools. It was a promise to a grandmother who taught her that hands forget, but tools remember. A promise she kept across an ocean, through a fire, and through nine silent years.


Every Nonna's Boutique bag carries that promise. And every bag, in some quiet way, still belongs to a fifteen-year-old girl who pressed a brass thimble into her grandmother's hand and said, "Teach me."

Two generations. One workbench. The thimbles that survived.

Take a Closer Look at Rosa's Work

Explore Rosa's bags now

VISIT NONNA'S BOUTIQUE

30-day money-back guarantee

"I bought one of Rosa's bags after reading her story, and I can't explain how it felt when I held it in my hands. You can feel the years, the love, the quiet strength in every stitch. It's more than just a bag. It's like carrying someone's legacy."

- Marissa

Verified Customer

VISIT NONNA'S BOUTIQUE

More Than Just Customers. They Became Part of Her Story.

"I bought one of Rosa's bags 8 years ago, and it's still my favorite. It's more than a bag. It feels like a piece of someone's soul"

— Rachel M., California

Verified Customer

"Rosa's bag was my first real gift to myself after graduating. I still use it every day. Thank you, Rosa, for everything you've made."

— Emilia G., Texas

Verified Customer

"When I opened the box and smelled the leather, I cried. It reminded me of my grandmother's house in Naples. This collection means so much."

— Lisa K., New York

Verified Customer

"It's not just the leather. It's the life in it. I've never felt more connected to the story behind something I bought."

— Annie L., Washington

Verified Customer

VISIT NONNA'S ONLINE STORE

 

Customer Favorites (limited stock)

Alba’s Textured Carry | Shoulder Bag

Arianna’s Everyday Carry | Shoulder Bag

Francesca’s Sleek Essential | Tote Bag

Serena’s Zip Carry | Shoulder Bag

Greta’s Braided Charm | Crossbody Bag

Sale

Camilla’s Structured Carry | Handbag

Sale

Paola’s Fold Carry | Clutch

Sale

Giulia’s Multi-Zip | Crossbody Bag

View all
Contact us

Email: support@nonnaboutique.com
Available Hours: 

Monday to Friday: 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM
Closed on Weekends and Public Holidays

Privacy Policy & Terms of Service

We value your privacy and are committed to transparency. While we may collect personal information for marketing purposes, we will always inform you of the reasons behind each collection. Please note that this website uses cookies to enhance your browsing experience and to serve targeted advertisements. This website operates as a marketplace. The owners receive compensation for the sale of Nonna's Boutique and other advertised products. As such, this website may have a financial connection to the products and services featured here and receives payment when a qualified lead is referred. Disclaimer: This is an advertisement and not an actual news article, blog, or consumer protection update. These images/stories/testimonies have been created using AI.

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service