Asyllum Talia 2- Ring Bag Review

In my second part review article of Asyllum, this time we look at the stunning Talia 2-ring bag from the one and only Asyllum.

A picture of Eve Sara modelling the Talia 2 Way Ring Bag by Asyllum.

Asyllum Talia 2- Ring Bag Review

The Bag That Demands Center Stage: The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag. The Talia bags embody the revolution in accessories โ€” where bags arenโ€™t just carriers but characters. Let's dive into my second parter Asyllum review this time about the bag that transforms any look into a head turner. The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag isnโ€™t your grandmotherโ€™s clutch. Itโ€™s a compact, bold purse that integrates hardware art with functional design.
This bag is not shy. It will:
Minimal size
Maximum attitude
A ring โ€” not just for hands but for style symbolism

A picture of the Talia 2 wat Ring bag from Asyllum.

Style & Aesthetic

The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag does something simple yet radical:
It turns hardware into a design centerpiece.
The ring isnโ€™t just functional โ€” itโ€™s symbolic.
It flips between classic clutch and wearable sculpture.
No matter how itโ€™s worn, it pulls focus.
This is the accessory equivalent of a โ€œdonโ€™t test meโ€ eyebrow arc.
A picture of one of Eve Sara's snakes Anubis with the Talia 2 Way Ring Bag from Asyllum.

Materials & Build

While precise materials arenโ€™t always fully disclosed in every retailer listing, what is clear from listings is:
A durable, structured body
Hardware that doesnโ€™t hide
Build aesthetics that linger in memory.
Compared to soft, shapeless bags, Talia gives you presence. Itโ€™s a bag that looks good on camera, under club lights, or at rooftop cocktail hours.
A close up picture of the Talia 2 Way Ring Bag from Asyllum.
Bag - @asyllum Pics by - @findingedenwitheve

Concept & Narrative

Fashion is narrative โ€” your wardrobe should read like a diary that refuses blandness.
The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag tells a story of:
Rebellion against bag minimalism
Hardware thatโ€™s almost jewellery
Compact design for the night that wonโ€™t wait. Itโ€™s chic, but in a confrontational way โ€” like a poet yelling from a subway station. These arenโ€™t luxury vehicles (think Hermรจs) โ€” these are value-driven rebels. They both sit in a mid-tier price range that prioritizes impact over investment. A bag that refuses to be background noise. Bag small enough to hold essentials, but bold enough to hold focus.
A picture of model Eve Sara modelling for the Talia 2 Way Ring Bag from Asyllum.

Talia 2-Way Ring Bag โ€” Hardware With a Pulse

Some bags carry your things. This one carries an attitude.
The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag looks like it was ripped straight off the shoulder of a cyberpunk anti-hero and dropped into your wardrobe with a warning label. Blacked-out leather sets the stage, but itโ€™s the hardware that steals the scene โ€” a cascade of metal rings marching down the strap like armour plating, industrial clips flashing like chrome teeth, and buckles that look less decorative and more operational.
This isnโ€™t minimalism. This is controlled chaos.
The structure is compact but tactical, with multiple compartments that feel engineered rather than stitched. Every pocket, zip, and latch suggests intention โ€” like each detail has a purpose you donโ€™t need explained. The front buckle closure anchors the design visually, giving the bag a utilitarian edge that borders on rebellious uniform. Itโ€™s the kind of accessory that makes even a simple outfit look like part of a concept.
And then thereโ€™s the 2-way strap. Shoulder or crossbody โ€” either way, it changes the silhouette of your entire look. Short strap? Youโ€™re serving sharp, city-slick dominance. Long strap? Suddenly itโ€™s street-ready, hands-free, and slightly dangerous.
Styling it feels less like accessorizing and more like gearing up.
The Talia isnโ€™t trying to be pretty. Itโ€™s trying to be unforgettable โ€” the kind of bag that looks like it has a backstory, a playlist, and possibly a criminal record. If your style leans polished, it will disrupt it. If your style leans edgy, it will amplify it. Either way, it refuses to be background noise.
This is the bag you reach for when you want your outfit to look like it bites back.
A close up picture of one of Eve Sara's snakes Anubis inside the Talia 2 Way Ring Bag from Asyllum.
One of Eve's Snakes - Anubis featured in the Talia 2 Way Ring Bag By @Asyllum

Affordability โ€” Industrial Edge Without the Designer Damage

Letโ€™s be honest: a bag that looks this aggressive usually comes with a price tag that feels just as violent. The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag doesnโ€™t.
Retailing at about $64.95 (marked down from $75.95), it sits firmly in the accessible statement piece category โ€” the kind of price that lets you experiment with bold hardware and editorial styling without committing to luxury-tier spending. Even better, the brand notes that VAT is covered on purchases, which can soften the real checkout cost depending on your location.
Bag pricing today ranges from ludicrously expensive to surprisingly accessible. Talia lands near the approachable end, making it a great entrance point for statement accessories.
Highlights:
Approx. $64.95 USD (down from about $75.95 USD) โ€” a steal in the world of fashion with edge.
Doesnโ€™t require a luxury budget โ€” but still feels luxe.
Ideal for trend-hunters who want visual impact without a heavy spend
This balancing act between value and attitude is rare.
Inside the brandโ€™s own bag lineup, that price actually lands right around the middle. Comparable styles range from roughly $39.95 to $65.95, placing the Talia slightly above entry-level pieces but still far from premium pricing territory. Translation: youโ€™re paying for design attitude and hardware drama, not heritage branding.
Material choice plays a role in keeping it accessible. The bag uses vegan leather, which allows for structured shaping and heavy hardware aesthetics while avoiding the cost spikes that come with traditional leather construction. The result is a piece that visually reads high-impact without financially behaving like it.
Financially speaking, the Talia is built for experimentation. Itโ€™s the bag you buy when you want your outfit to look expensive, rebellious, and editorial โ€” without your bank account needing recovery time afterward.
A picture of Eve Sara modelling the Talia 2 way Ring Bag and Astra Arch Sneaker Heels from Asyllum.
Model - @findingedenwitheve

Built Like Street Armor

The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag is constructed from structured vegan leather, a material choice that perfectly matches it's industrial personality. Unlike soft, slouchy fabrics, this finish holds it's shape with intention โ€” giving the bag that sharp, almost architectural silhouette that makes it look engineered rather than sewn. The texture reads slightly grained and matte, which keeps the heavy hardware from feeling costume-like and instead grounds the design in something tougher, more utilitarian.
The real material story, though, lives in the metal detailing. Multiple chrome-tone rings line the strap like mechanical vertebrae, paired with chunky clips, zipper pulls, and buckles that feel deliberately oversized. This isnโ€™t delicate hardware meant to disappear; itโ€™s structural ornamentation designed to be seen, heard, and felt. Every movement creates a subtle metallic shift โ€” a reminder that the bag is as much an object as an accessory.
Functionally, the combination works. Vegan leather keeps the bag lightweight and resistant to everyday wear, while the metal elements add visual weight without dragging down the overall carry. Itโ€™s a contrast of textures โ€” smooth, matte, reflective, industrial โ€” layered together to create tension in the best possible way.
These materials werenโ€™t chosen for tradition or luxury heritage. They were chosen for impact. The Talia isnโ€™t trying to age gracefully; itโ€™s built to look sharp, bold, and slightly dangerous from the very first wear.
A picture if Eve Sara's snake Anubis coiled round the Talia 2 Way Ring Bag from Asyllum.

Style & Aesthetic โ€” Industrial Drama in Miniature

The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag doesnโ€™t accessorize an outfit โ€” it rewrites it.
It's aesthetic lives somewhere between underground club scene, dystopian runway, and street-ready armour. The silhouette is compact and structured, but the attitude is loud: metal rings stacked along the strap like chrome vertebrae, oversized clips that feel engineered rather than decorative, and pocketed panels that give it a tactical, almost utility-gear energy. It looks less like a handbag and more like a piece of wearable equipment.
Visually, it thrives on contrast. The matte black body grounds the design in something dark and controlled, while the reflective hardware flashes like warning lights every time it catches movement. Itโ€™s that tension โ€” sleek versus industrial, polished versus aggressive โ€” that makes the bag feel alive rather than styled.
This is not a minimalist piece, and itโ€™s definitely not background fashion. The Talia sits in the same aesthetic universe as statement boots, sculptural heels, and sharp tailoring โ€” the kind of accessory stylists use when they want a look to feel intentional, cinematic, and just a little bit dangerous.
If your wardrobe already leans edgy, it amplifies it. If your wardrobe is soft or classic, it disrupts it. Either way, the message is unmistakable: this bag didnโ€™t come to blend in. It came to take over.
A picture of Eve Sara modelling the Talia 2 Way Ring Bag from Asyllum in her house.
Dรฉcor & Concept by - @findingedenwitheve

Final Verdict โ€” Not for the Faint of Outfit

The Talia 2-Way Ring Bag isnโ€™t here to politely complete your look. Itโ€™s here to challenge it.
From its industrial hardware to its unapologetically structured silhouette, every detail feels intentional โ€” like it was designed for people who treat fashion as self-expression, not decoration. It doesnโ€™t whisper trends or chase approval. It holds its own lane, unapologetic and sharp, waiting for the right wearer to match it's energy.
This is the kind of piece that turns a sidewalk into a runway and a simple outfit into a statement. You donโ€™t wear the Talia because you need a bag. You wear it because you want impact, presence, and a little bit of danger stitched into your style.
Some accessories finish an outfit. This one defines it. I hope you enjoyed these articles I have written for Asyllum, and check out their latest stock. If you want help or to talk fashion, you can send me a message on Instagram @findingedenwitheve or email me at evesaramcintosh@gmail.com. Additionally, if you would like to work with me, please fill out the contact form below.
Eve

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