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The House

We are not a trend. We are a return to self.

The Architecture of Modern Filipiniana.

The Mestizo was created for those who live between worlds—whose identities are layered, whose lineages are mixed, and whose elegance refuses to fit into a box. We design for individuals who seek meaning in what they wear: culturally nuanced, emotionally awake, and artistically attuned. Our pieces are meant to be worn like memory—softly, powerfully, and without compromise.

We believe fashion can be both ancestral and avant-garde, both refined and rooted. That you can wear something beautiful and have it mean something deeper. Every silhouette we create is a quiet act of remembrance—and a love letter to complexity.

Our design language is rooted in form.

Inspired by Filipiniana silhouettes but reimagined through proportion, structure, and movement, our garments explore how Filipino dress can exist within a modern global wardrobe.

Embroidery becomes structure.
Silhouette becomes architecture.
Heritage becomes movement.



The Mestizo exists at the intersection of memory and form.

Our garments are designed in dialogue with identity. Inspired by Filipiniana forms, but not bound by nostalgia. Grounded in heritage, but envisioned through the lens of modern ritual and editorial storytelling. Whether you’re reclaiming your roots, redefining your tradition, or creating new ones—we offer more than clothing. We offer garments that hold both worlds at once.

We release pieces in small, intentional collections—slowly, with care. Each design is meant to be lived in, styled like sculpture, and remembered. Not as a costume, but as a conversation.



We design for those who live in the in-between—where heritage is layered, identity is evolving, and self-expression is an act of quiet power. Our garments are sculpted through proportion and form, created not to perform culture but to embody it.

Here, your identity is not too much.
Here, softness is power.
Here, elegance carries memory forward.

The Mark

The mark is built from four hands meeting at a cross. The hands represent the craft — the making, the fitting, the finishing. The cross represents the intersection: of cultures, of traditions, of the old form and the new silhouette. Together, they form a single, unified mark. The architecture of what The Mestizo is.