<p>It was 30 years ago that Christian Louboutin borrowed his assistant's nail varnish to fix a problematic sole and inadvertently created a design that would make him globally famous.</p>.<p>It was 1993 and Louboutin, then 30, was examining a pink and purple shoe prototype. The black sole was too dominant, he felt, and therefore called for his assistant.</p>.<p>"I took the nail polish and erased the black. I wasn't thinking to add the red," he recalled to <em>AFP </em>in his brightly decorated Paris apartment.</p>.<p><strong>Also See | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/dh-galleries/photos/billboard-women-in-music-awards-2023-best-dressed-stars-on-the-red-carpet-1196442#1" target="_blank">Billboard Women in Music Awards 2023: Best dressed stars on the red carpet</a></strong></p>.<p>"But suddenly it was a revelation!"</p>.<p>The earlier idea of releasing a different colour sole each season never materialised.</p>.<p>"People who don't like to wear colours still like red," he said.</p>.<p>"The obsession began with the fact that red is more than just a colour for me.</p>.<p>"I have very early memories of women dressed in black but already with red nails and lips. It began with cinema, the actresses of the 1950s like Sophia Loren."</p>.<p>He marked the 30th anniversary of his famous red sole this week with a dance performance at the Opera Comique and will soon open his first hotel in Portugal named "Vermelho" (Red).</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-offbeat/king-size-long-lost-bed-might-finally-serve-uk-monarch-charles-iii-1196885.html" target="_blank">King size? Long-lost bed might finally serve UK monarch Charles III</a></strong></p>.<p>The black stiletto with the red sole remains his best-selling model, despite the range of flats and mid-heels.</p>.<p>He rejects the idea of heels as anti-feminist, saying he delights in seeing customers put on a pair of stilettos and admire themselves "front, profile and back" without caring what their "husband, boyfriend or girlfriend will think".</p>.<p>Or little girls trying on their mother's heels without anyone telling them to: "There is a kind of infantile pleasure in seeing life from a little higher up."</p>.<p>For him, heels are a symbol of female empowerment.</p>.<p>He thinks of Tina Turner in her heyday, or Beyonce now, teetering on heels but incarnating "feminism, much more than someone who lets themselves go".</p>.<p>With the passing of lockdowns and lounging around in pyjamas, it is time to celebrate, he added.</p>.<p>His new collection, inspired by flamenco, sees him collaborate with Rossy de Palma, the flamboyant Spanish star of many Pedro Almodovar movies.</p>.<p>"I like singular people, and there is only one Rossy," he said. "Someone who exudes amusement, pleasure, laughter, everything."</p>
<p>It was 30 years ago that Christian Louboutin borrowed his assistant's nail varnish to fix a problematic sole and inadvertently created a design that would make him globally famous.</p>.<p>It was 1993 and Louboutin, then 30, was examining a pink and purple shoe prototype. The black sole was too dominant, he felt, and therefore called for his assistant.</p>.<p>"I took the nail polish and erased the black. I wasn't thinking to add the red," he recalled to <em>AFP </em>in his brightly decorated Paris apartment.</p>.<p><strong>Also See | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/dh-galleries/photos/billboard-women-in-music-awards-2023-best-dressed-stars-on-the-red-carpet-1196442#1" target="_blank">Billboard Women in Music Awards 2023: Best dressed stars on the red carpet</a></strong></p>.<p>"But suddenly it was a revelation!"</p>.<p>The earlier idea of releasing a different colour sole each season never materialised.</p>.<p>"People who don't like to wear colours still like red," he said.</p>.<p>"The obsession began with the fact that red is more than just a colour for me.</p>.<p>"I have very early memories of women dressed in black but already with red nails and lips. It began with cinema, the actresses of the 1950s like Sophia Loren."</p>.<p>He marked the 30th anniversary of his famous red sole this week with a dance performance at the Opera Comique and will soon open his first hotel in Portugal named "Vermelho" (Red).</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-offbeat/king-size-long-lost-bed-might-finally-serve-uk-monarch-charles-iii-1196885.html" target="_blank">King size? Long-lost bed might finally serve UK monarch Charles III</a></strong></p>.<p>The black stiletto with the red sole remains his best-selling model, despite the range of flats and mid-heels.</p>.<p>He rejects the idea of heels as anti-feminist, saying he delights in seeing customers put on a pair of stilettos and admire themselves "front, profile and back" without caring what their "husband, boyfriend or girlfriend will think".</p>.<p>Or little girls trying on their mother's heels without anyone telling them to: "There is a kind of infantile pleasure in seeing life from a little higher up."</p>.<p>For him, heels are a symbol of female empowerment.</p>.<p>He thinks of Tina Turner in her heyday, or Beyonce now, teetering on heels but incarnating "feminism, much more than someone who lets themselves go".</p>.<p>With the passing of lockdowns and lounging around in pyjamas, it is time to celebrate, he added.</p>.<p>His new collection, inspired by flamenco, sees him collaborate with Rossy de Palma, the flamboyant Spanish star of many Pedro Almodovar movies.</p>.<p>"I like singular people, and there is only one Rossy," he said. "Someone who exudes amusement, pleasure, laughter, everything."</p>