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Mila Schon


Mila Schön (September 28, 1916 – September 5, 2008) was an Italian fashion designer.

Mila Schön was born Maria Carmen Nutrizio, in Trogir to wealthy Dalmatian Italian aristocratic parents.

With the breakup of the Austo-Hungarian Empire at the end of World War I, Schön's family lost their estates. The family moved to Italy where Schön's father managed a pharmacy.

During World War II, Mila married Aurelio Schön, an Austrian precious metals dealer, whom she met in Milan. In the postwar period, Schön enjoyed a brief return to wealth. She became a client of the most prestigious Parisian couture houses such as Balenciaga and Dior.

Following the failure of her husband's business and the couple's divorce, Mila once again found herself without financial resources. Unable to afford Parisian couture, Schön paid skilled Milanese seamstresses to copy the latest couture. Other women soon expressed interest in Schön's designs and in 1958 Schön and her mother opened a workshop. Schön had her first show in 1965 and in 1966 she opened a boutique on Via Monte Napoleone, the center of the Milan fashion world. The Via Monte Napoleone shop was decoarted with modern furniture by Joe Colombo and Eero Saarinen.

In 1965, Schön showed her collection at the Pitti Palace in Florence along with other major Italian designers. For this show, all of Schön's fashion were in various shades of violet. Afterwards, The New York Times called her “the shrinking violet of the Italian haute couture” (1968) and declared she did not “make clothes for shrinking violets" (1973).

Schön’s work was introduced in the United States in 1967 in Dallas and Houston by Neiman Marcus. In 1969, she designed uniforms for Air Italia. Schön’s men’s line and her her first prêt-à-porter collection for women appeared in 1971. In 1972, she designed uniforms for Iran Air. Schön was the first Italian designer to show ready-to-wear in Japan.


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