Carolina Herrera has a terrifying fashion pedigree. She attended her first couture show, hosted by Cristobal Balenciaga himself, with her grandmother aged 13, and set up her own label after encouragement from her close friend, legendary fashion editor Diana Vreeland.
Is it any wonder, then, that she has come to be one of the world's most successful red carpet fashion designers? Her classically elegant gowns - notable for the use of vintage materials such as antique lace and taffeta, cut in a clean and modern style - have graced the backs of A-list stars such as Eva Longoria and Uma Thurman. Herrera worked closely with Jackie Onassis for a decade and has forged a relationship with actress Renée Zellweger, who regularly wears her clothes at award ceremonies and on frequent public appearances.
Born 74 years ago into a patrician Venezuelan family, Herrera spent her youth between Caracas and New York, a stunning socialite with good looks and grace who was equally at home among royals as she was within Andy Warhol's arty-party crowd.
It wasn't until 1981 that she moved into the world of fashion design, after mooting to Vreeland an intention to create a range of textiles. "That is the most boring idea I have ever heard of," came her friend's caustic response. "Why don't you do a collection of dresses?" And so Carolina Herrera's eponymous brand was born. Her empire now encompasses not only the original clothing collection, but also a range of bestselling fragrances - including cult scent 212 and 212 Men - and a more accessibly priced diffusion line in CH Carolina Herrera, which offers the label's central tenets of easy chic and timeless style to a wider audience. This year also sees the launch of the brand's White Shirt collection, a selection of eight different takes on the wardrobe staple - one which Herrera herself professes to wear most days - including tie-waist details, pussybow collars, peplums and corset references, all modelled in a new campaign by British supermodel Jacquetta Wheeler.
I visited Herrera in her suite at Claridges during a recent whistlestop trip to London, where she held forth on the secrets of being fashionable and fabulous, and offered her fail-safe tips for glamour, whether you're walking down the red carpet or simply to the bus stop...