Rosita Missoni, matriarch of Italian fashion house behind iconic zigzag knitwear, dies at 93
ROME — Rosita Missoni, the matriarch of the iconic Italian fashion house that made colorful zigzag-patterned knitwear high fashion and helped launch Italian ready-to-wear, has died. She was 93.
Missoni died peacefully on Wednesday, Missoni SpA and the Missoni family said in a joint statement.
The family behind luxury label Missoni accept the Rodeo Drive Walk of Style Award. After the success of the Target line, they are looking to broaden appeal even more.
Local officials offered condolences on Thursday and recalled Missoni’s ties to the small northern city of Gallarate, where the Missoni brand was born in an artisan’s shop in 1953.
Born Rosita Jelmini, Missoni grew up in a family that owned a textile factory that produced shawls. When she met and married Ottavio Missoni, they founded their eponymous fashion house in Gallarate. It would turn into a fashion dynasty, with the couple’s three children and their offspring involved in expanding the brand.
It all feels different this time, like we’re finally entering the upcycling era.
The Missonis got their first break in 1958, when the Rinascente department store commissioned 500 colorful vertically striped shirtdresses — the first to carry the Missoni label.
The Missonis first showed their collection in Milan in 1966 and the brand helped turn the city into a fashion mecca.
Their signature fashions, with the trademark graphic zigzags, long had a reputation for wearability and for surviving many seasons of changing trends. Family members were often the brand’s best models, wearing Missoni graphic creations in everyday life.
John Galliano, the controversial fashion designer who joined Maison Margiela in 2014 after being fired from Dior and his own design house, is stepping down.
The founders turned over the business to their children in 1997, though Rosita remained involved in the Missoni home collection.
In 2013, as the company celebrated its 60th anniversary, the family endured a double tragedy. The eldest Missoni son and the company’s CEO, Vittorio Missoni, died when a plane carrying him and five others disappeared off Venezuela. It took six months to locate the plane wreckage in the seas off the South American country, during which time patriarch Ottavio Missoni died at the age of 92.
Trailblazing fashion designer Diane von Furstenberg joins The Times in a preview of the U.S. premiere of an exhibition about her life and work, including that beloved wrap dress, at the Skirball Cultural Center.
In 2018, the family sold a 41.2% stake to the Italian investment fund FSI but maintained majority control of the house.
In 2021, the youngest daughter, Angela Missoni, stepped down as creative director after 24 years.
There was no immediate word on funeral arrangements.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.