Twenty designers.
Twenty looks.
One question every body already knows the answer to.
Born to Die is Initial House's debut major show — a collective examination of what it means to be alive, staged through the lens of ten life stages and two irreconcilable ways of moving through them. It is not a fashion show about death. It is a fashion show about what we do with the time before it.
The collection takes ten moments that every human life moves through — and asks what they look like when worn. Each stage holds two perspectives. Two ways of inhabiting the same skin. Two ways of understanding what the body is for. The twenty looks do not tell you which is right. They hold the tension between them and ask you to sit with it.
Initial House's governance model means every look is authored by an independent designer — selected through open call, working from a shared brief, retaining full credit and commission on their work. Twenty designers. One look each. Twenty singular responses to the same impossible question.
The show date is deliberate. It is not a calendar choice.
The Born to Die open call is in development. Leave your details to be notified when applications open — whether you are a designer, a press contact, a buyer, or someone who simply wants to be in the room when it happens.
YOUR_FORM_ID_BTD with your Formspree endpoint before going live.
Born to Die is Initial House's debut major show — a collective examination of the human lifecycle staged through twenty independent designer responses to a single shared brief. The collection is structured around ten life stages, each held by two looks: one interpreting that stage through a framework of faith, purpose, and transcendence; one interpreting the same stage in the absence of those things. Each look belongs to one designer. One stage. One perspective. One voice.
The dual narrative — With Christ / Without Christ — is not a theological argument. It is a structural device for exploring two irreconcilable but equally human ways of inhabiting a life: one that understands the body as something borrowed, temporary, and accountable to something beyond itself; and one that understands the body as the beginning and end of its own story. Both are true for someone. Both deserve to be dressed with care.
Each pair of looks within a stage should be understood as mirrors, not as a sequence. They are the same moment experienced by two different people — the same birth, the same grief, the same final breath — each carrying different weight. Designers are not assigned a perspective. They apply for a stage and a craft category, and in conversation with the Creative Director, find their place within the structure.
The show date is Caitlyn Bray's birthday. This is not incidental. Born to Die is a show about what we do with the time we are given, staged on the anniversary of the day one person's time began. That biographical anchor is woven into the collection's DNA — not as autobiography, but as evidence that the question is not abstract.
The Born to Die open call launches in 2026. To be notified the moment applications open, join the interest list. In the meantime, the strongest applications will come from designers who have lived with this brief.