Once
an avid devotee of the great couture houses,
haute chic socialite Carolina Herrera has herself
become New York's most sought after couturier.
From the ateliers of New York and Paris,
a very elegant woman has emerged to create
a stunning range of designs that equal those
once made for her by the great couture houses.
Carolina Herrera imbues her collections with
the Latin feel for femininity, elegance and
beauty that is her own personal trademark.
"My look - The Carolina Herrera Look
- is for the modern woman of today",
says this Venezuelan beauty. "It is classic
but in a modern way, at the same time it's
very elegant with very simple lines".
Carolina, the socialite and wife of wealthy
landowner Reinaldo Herrera belongs to an elite
group of wealthy Latin American families.
Once easily spotted visiting the great design
houses of Paris, she is now herself contributing
to the world of fashion with her 'Carolina
Herrera Collection' and although she launched
her first collection only 14 years ago, it
would appear that Carolina was being unwittingly
prepared for her professional destiny right
from the start.
"I was brought up in Caracas and also
in Europe. I never wanted to be a fashion
designer, not even when I was a child - when
you are a little girl everyday changes, no?
One day you think you are going to be a great
actress, the next day perhaps you are going
to be an opera singer and on another day you
are not going to be anything at all. But I
do come from a family where all the women
are very elegant and I think that helps one's
eye. My grandmother, my mother, all my family
in fact used to be dressed in Parisian couture.
And when I was very young, thirteen or so
I remember going with my grandmother to a
Balenciaga show on one of our trips to Paris.
I believe that for a fashion designer it is
very important to be born with an eye for
fashion, and I think that I liked [fashion]
very much ever since I was a child".
The Venezuela of Carolina's childhood was
marked by a strict upbringing exercised by
a disciplinarian father who discouraged his
daughters' attendance at school preferring
to keep them at home to be educated by tutors
and governesses in line with the centuries
old family tradition.
"Venezuela was a very sophisticated
country when I was growing up there",
recalls Carolina "My family arrived in
Venezuela four hundred years ago from Spain
and France. I'm married to Reinaldo Herrera,
who is the Marquis of Torrecassor, a Spanish
name also and he too has come from a very
old family. His family home was built in 1590
and we are still in the same house. It has
always been in the family.
"I came from a very disciplined background.
My father was one of the pioneers of aviation
in Venezuela and he was the Governor of Caracas
for ten years. He did not believe that girls
should go away to school. He thought that
they should stay in the house with a governess
and tutors. My three sisters and I had a Hungarian
governess for twenty-five years who taught
us to speak English and French and all things
you must learn".
It is difficult to imagine a more dramatic
contrast than that between the gracious and
refined life of Spanish colonial Caracas and
the frenetic pace of New York. Even more at
odds would seem to be the attitudes towards
women in both places, and one can't help but
wonder how Carolina has reconciled the tough,
New York variety with her "latin"
counterpart - beautiful, graceful and the
man's prize possession.
"The role of women in New York is...well,
they want to be like a man because they work
and they are very active. The women I dress
look very sensuous and like a woman. They
are very much admired by the men without any
vulgarity. Sometimes it is said that dress
must be very sexy, and sexiness for some designers
is to do it very tight - you see that the
woman cannot even move in it. So I think that
the women I dress are admired by men, they
look very sexy and they also look like real
women.
"The most difficult thing in the world
is to produce a simple, wonderful little black
dress, with beautiful pure lines. It's very
easy when you see all those dresses that have
ruffles and buttons and all sorts of details.
It seems that they want to cover something
that is not right. My clothes are very classic
in the modern way, for the woman of today,
but at the same time they are very sophisticated".
Carolina's precepts have successfully bridged
the transitions between Venezuela and New
York, between consumer and designer. Carrying
herself with a grace reminiscent of the Spanish
bullfighters, she has always been known as
an arbiter of good taste and an exquisite
dresser.
"I've been in New York, shuttling back
and forth, since I was a child because my
father and mother used to have a house here,
as did my mother-in-law. It's like my second
home. I've been in the New York "scene"
all my life, so it's not new.
"I was always involved in fashion in
a different way - I used to buy clothes from
the designers! For ten years, from 1972 to
1982, I was always included in the Ten Best
Dressed Women in the World. Because of that
they all know you in the fashion scene already,
and I have some very good friends involved
in fashion who really pushed me, and said
'Why don't you try and do something different,
something professional with a collection?'
Basically, that's the way I started here in
New York, and I stay here because I think
it is becoming the capital of the world. Everybody
wants to come and be successful in New York.
It's like having a diplomatic passport, all
the doors are opened to you if you are successful
in New York".
The task of constantly producing new and
exciting collections is an arduous one, and
anyone in a creative capacity is arguably
involved in the most difficult career of all.
Unlike many designers, Carolina had no formal
training, and along with the search for inspiration
she had to confront the technical aspects
of design. She employs a talented staff who
sew and drape under her direction, many of
whom have been with her from the start and
she compares the atmosphere in her atelier
to that of a large family.
"You know the inspiration for your designs
are in everyday life", she says. "I'm
designing for the nineties, not the eighteenth
century, so it has to come from everyday life.
I get inspiration from everywhere - when I
go to the museum, to the opera where I get
inspiration from something I hear, from people
walking in the street, from girls dancing
at the discotheque...
"Of the great couturiers, Balenciaga
is perhaps my number one, but there's little
inspiration in all of them. Chanel has been
a great inspiration for most of the designers,
but I really like Balenciaga, and Poret also.
If you know a little bit of fashion history
you can see that fashion is a repetition.
It is simply all in making it look different,
the way you put things together and the materials
you use, because the ideas have been there
forever".
Carolina's position as both a buyer and designer
of couture has obviously lent her some helpful
insights, not least because she is a woman
in a field still heavily dominated by male
designers.
"I think it has helped me a lot because
I'm in a different position due to the fact
that I'm a woman. I think I know what women
want, so that's easier. And to have been growing
up in a house where all the women are well-dressed,
and the clothes so beautifully made inside
and out, is a wonderful training. Living with
something really well made...that's why my
clothes are so well made and they look great.
The most important thing for all my collections
is that they have to fit to absolute perfection".
Investigation reveals that devotees of Herrera
fashion include women such as Jacqueline Onassis,
Nancy Reagan, Kathleen Turner and Caroline
Kennedy, but Carolina refuses to name her
famous clients herself. Her discretion is
another legacy of the days spent as buyer
rather than designer.
"I have customers from all over the
world, but I never tell their names because
I don't want to make any publicity from other
people. [Designers] used to do it to me, without
asking and I was always very annoyed and I'm
certainly not going to do the same thing",
she says defiantly. "I always say that
if dresses can't sell themselves and you have
to mention very important names to do so,
then there must be something wrong with them.
You know, many have to say 'such and such
is buying my clothes' to see if the other
one is going to buy it. When they used to
tell me that 'so and so is buying that dress"
I always used to change my mind and buy another
one".
While on the subject of buying fashion it's
impossible to resist asking what the couture
houses thought when they discovered that one
of their best customers was about to go into
competition with them. Carolina bursts into
laughter at the recollection.
"I think the reaction was, 'Oh, she's
going to do it for one or two years and then
she will get tired of it and come back to
us'. They had no idea that I was very serious
about it and that was the reaction of many,
many people. They said, 'Well maybe she's
doing it for a hobby for a year or two, and
then it won't work anymore'. Now everybody
is, I think, quite amazed. It has been very,
very successful, and my great successes are
the women who buy my clothes. The more they
buy, the more successful I become".
Speaking with Carolina Herrera and listening
to her enthuse about her success and her fast
growing business, a particular question inevitably
arises. Obviously she doesn't need to do this.
You can't help thinking that women with Carolina's
wealth and position are more likely to be
found dabbling in popular philanthropy to
fill their time.
"When you attempt something that you
want to do and you become a success, it's
very difficult to leave it on the sidelines.
You want to do more and more. The more successful
you are, the more you want to achieve.
And husband Reinaldo, how does he feel about
his enterprising wife's flourishing couturier
business? "He loves it! He's a great
help. He's wonderful because he supports all
my ideas and he is genuinely delighted - that's
the best of all. You know, you can't do anything
if someone in your house is against you, no?
I couldn't have done it without him; he has
supported me through all my terrible moments
and all my good moments - the entire time".
The only drawback Carolina admits to is the
strain of constantly appearing in the public
eye and the inroads her career makes into
time spent with her family.
"The creative part is what I love the
most.
These other things which belong to the business
side - the travelling, the personal appearances,
the interviews, the television, things like
that - I don't think I was educated for that
because I'm a very private person and for
me that's the most difficult thing in the
world, to be so in the public eye. It's like
an invasion of privacy. I know I have to do
it because it's part of the business, but
for me that's the most difficult of all. The
element that I really enjoy is the creation
of the collections, choosing materials and
colours and mixing it all together. That is
what I adore".
Mixing colours and materials is not the only
thing at which Carolina excels. She also mixes
her own perfume - really mixes it, unlike
many designers who simply put their names
on a bottle of scent.
"The perfume has been very successful.
It's selling very well in London; it's one
of the best sellers at Harrods and it's selling
very well in Spain also and especially here
in the United States.
"My perfume is very different, it's
very unique. It is a very exotic fragrance
and at the same time very elegant - it has
a little bit of romance also. Men are always
attracted by the scent. I have been wearing
it for twelve years and I used to mix it myself.
I was always asked, 'What are you wearing!?'
In taxis for instance - a driver once said
to me: 'Oh lady, what are you wearing? You
make me so dizzy!!'
"All my clothes and my perfume; everything
I do is very international. My fashion has
to look well in Caracas, New York, Paris and
Rome - otherwise it would be folkloric".
Carolina designs three collections a year apart from the flagship Carolina Herrera Collection. She has another called "C.H.", encompassing less expensive dresses, a bridal collection and a small debutante collection for young ladies from fourteen to eighteen. Her heritage of high chic, her elegance and her charm permeate all her designs.
"Sometimes beauty is not connected with elegance. People have always connected the beautiful and the elegant but I don't think that it is true, it doesn't necessarily work. You can see the most beautiful women in the world and they don't have to be elegant. What I like is when the dress is part of the woman. It shouldn't be that a woman enters the room and you see only the dress and don't notice the woman. It has to be a combination, a harmony between the two of them. The most important thing is that a woman feels well in it. If she feels well she moves well and that is what elegance is all about".