Project Runway - Season 19 Access

Brandon Maxwell leaned forward, squinting.

Runway day. The guest judge was a legend: Iris van Herpen.

Meg’s face, backstage, was a perfect mask of horror.

Iris van Herpen broke it. “You didn’t design a flower,” she said, her voice soft with awe. “You designed an ecosystem. The rot, the life, the strange, beautiful violence of nature. That is not fashion. That is sculpture with a soul.” Project Runway - Season 19

Her concept was radical. While others built petal-shaped trains and floral bustiers, Chloé decided to tell the truth about her flower. The rafflesia wasn’t beautiful in the way a rose was. It was beautiful because it survived by breaking down the rotten. She would make a gown of decay reborn.

Meg went first. Her Middlemist Red gown was pretty. Technically flawless. The judges nodded. Nina Garcia said, “It’s elegant, but safe. Like a couture Valentine’s card.”

When Sasha reached the end of the runway, Chloé had programmed a final reveal. The model pressed a hidden button on the hip. The mycelium threads retracted, pulled by tiny fishing-line pulleys, revealing a second layer beneath: a short, sharp cocktail dress made entirely of mirrored shards—shattered compact discs she’d salvaged and dyed a pale, ghostly yellow. It was the maggot-like center of the corpse flower, turned into a dazzling disco ball of defiance. Brandon Maxwell leaned forward, squinting

“Oh, honey,” whispered Meg, the season’s queen bee, peeking at Chloé’s mood board. “That’s… brave. Very goth funeral chic.” Her own design, a gossamer dream inspired by the Middlemist Red camellia, was already taking shape in expensive, pre-dyed silks.

And for the first time that season, the monster in the workroom—the ticking clock—didn’t sound like a predator. To Chloé, it sounded like a heartbeat.

Then came Chloé.

She worked through the night, ignoring Meg’s snide comments about “composting on the runway.” She shredded old burlap coffee sacks, dyed them the corpse-flower purple, and wove them into a sculptural exoskeleton. From the center of the bodice, she let hundreds of raw, undyed linen threads spill out like mycelium roots. The silhouette was massive, angry, and utterly captivating.

“Designers, you have one day ,” Christian Siriano announced, his blazer sharper than his wit. “Make it work. Or don’t.”

Elaine Welteroth gasped.

The clock in the workroom had become a monster. Its tick was the heartbeat of a relentless predator. For Chloé, a 24-year-old self-taught designer from Atlanta, every second felt like a stitch pulled too tight.

“In fashion,” Christian said, placing a hand on her shoulder as the credits rolled, “everyone wants to be a rose. But the thing about roses? They get pruned. The corpse flower? You just have to stand back and watch people faint.”