Fashion competitions often flirt with the absurd, but every so often, the absurdity becomes the charm. That’s what happened when three Project Runway frontrunners—Ethan Mundt, Belania Daley, and Jesus Estrada—walked onto the Good Morning America set on July 16. Their assignment? Capture the personality of a cup of coffee in head-to-toe couture.
For designers accustomed to referencing centuries of art history or exploring thematic social commentary, boiling inspiration down to a latte’s gradient foam or the snap of a cappuccino cup’s handle was a surprisingly layered brief.
Coffee Beans Meet Camera Lights
The GMA studio isn’t a typical runway—its bright, wide-open floor and morning-show chaos give designers nowhere to hide. With celebrity stylist Law Roach and Project Runway icon Christian Siriano sitting just a few feet away, every hemline, seam, and stitch placement would be picked apart in real time. That intensity is half the thrill. Coffee might be comfort for most of us, but here, it was a ticking clock and a very public test of range.

goodmorningamerica.com | Ethan Mundt unveiled a sophisticated cappuccino-inspired tweed outfit on "GMA."
Ethan Mundt’s Cappuccino Couture
Ethan Mundt—remembered by many as the whimsically inventive Utica Queen from RuPaul’s Drag Race—leaned into cappuccino’s elegance rather than its coziness. His tweed suit wasn’t merely brown; it layered milk-washed beige with the cooler undertones you get in freshly pulled espresso crema.
The fabric choice was clever: tweed’s textured weave caught the light in ways that suggested froth without drifting into novelty. Law Roach smiled and called it “a very expensive cappuccino,” which, in fashion-speak, is both praise and a subtle acknowledgment that the look had market potential. Siriano’s “perfection” verdict sealed it.
Belania Daley’s Matcha Fluidity
Where Ethan was tailored restraint, Belania Daley embraced movement. She built her matcha latte look around a sheer, airy overlay floating over a boned corset—a tension between structure and looseness that echoed matcha’s dual personality: meditative ceremony and social-media star.
Her ombré dye job wasn’t a gimmick either; she used a wash technique that allowed pigment to feather naturally across the fabric, avoiding the flat, dipped-in-paint look that plagues inexperienced designers. Roach honed in on the clarity of the reference. Siriano, watching the garment shift with every step, said simply, “The movement is the best part,” as if to let the fabric speak for itself.
Jesus Estrada’s Mocha Sculpting
Jesus Estrada took “mocha” and dialed it up to architectural drama. His fitted trousers rose high enough to elongate the frame, but it was the floral top—built in sculpted layers of chocolate, caramel, and cream—that stopped conversation.
The petals didn’t flop; they stood upright, structured like small works of origami. Siriano, grinning, blurted, “Mix my mocha up! I really need one!”—the kind of playful reaction that comes when a garment gets under a judge’s skin in the best way.

goodmorningamerica.com | Belania Daley won the "Caffeine Couture Challenge," receiving the trophy and a $2,000 gift card.
A Surprise Commission
Belania’s name was called for the win, along with a trophy and a $2,000 gift card. The moment could have ended there, but Heidi Klum appeared via video with that mischievous glint she gets when she’s about to change someone’s week. Her ask was direct: design something for her to wear on the Project Runway runway. No time frame, no restrictions—just a rare, career-making invitation.
Why This Challenge Landed
For viewers, it wasn’t just the novelty of caffeine-themed couture that made the segment pop—it was watching seasoned creatives adapt in real time, turning everyday rituals into garments with staying power. Coffee is universal, but on that morning, it became a lens to gauge control, risk, and personality under pressure.
With Klum’s commission dangling like a golden ticket, the runway ahead looks less like a straight path and more like an espresso shot—short, intense, and capable of jolting the entire season forward.