This Is J.Crewโ€™s First Menโ€™s Collection Under Its New Creative Director

To be honest, Brendon Babenzienโ€™s debut collection doesnโ€™t look different, just subtly improved โ€” and thatโ€™s okay.

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It was unfair of all of us to expect sudden change as soon as Brendon Babenzien โ€” the founder of Noah and a former design director for Supreme โ€” took over J.Crewโ€˜s menโ€™s section. He was appointed creative director last spring, and the first collection was slated for the following fall. Well, the following fall is, well, now, and it seems that things havenโ€™t changed too much.

But thatโ€™s okay, I think?

When Babenzienโ€™s appointment was first announced, no one seemed shocked. It was surprising, sure, but his vision aligned with closely with J.Crewโ€™s, even if Noahโ€™s price points are, well, upmarket. He often references the ocean through nautical themed collections with Popeye and collabs with the Billion Oyster Project. Hell, Noah even made limited-edition limestone-based wetsuits.

Then thereโ€™s Babenzienโ€™s penchant for prep, a style he subverted while with Supreme but has clearly come to appreciate since starting Noah in 2015. Noahโ€™s lookbooks have always felt like what J.Crew could be. Thereโ€™s alway been clear crossover in their collaborator pool, too: Sperry, Barbour and Timex, to name a few. And even though Noah is decidedly more free-minded about its statements, the brandsโ€™ themes sometimes felt similar, too: One Noah season centered on cross country, while another featured nods to life upstate. J.Crewโ€™s done hiking collections and fictional sports merch has been a mainstay since Todd Snyder worked there.

So, was it fair to expect a complete transformation? Probably not. That being said, more of the same feels surprising, too, even though the standout pieces from Babenzienโ€™s tenure are already much stronger. If this collection were a cocktail, itโ€™d be three parts J.Crew, one part Babenzienโ€™s new direction โ€” a subtle, puristโ€™s-opinion-preserving twist on a classic.

His most notable alterations were much-needed improvements to the brandโ€™s rolodex of colors, patterns and textures. Take this first collectionโ€™s Madras Barn Jacket, which comes in bright red or a pink-ish Madras pattern with a contrasting corduroy collar, for example. Itโ€™s a familiar formula, for sure, but these iterations fit far better than J.Crewโ€™s past attempts. The same can be said of the jeans and the sweaters, which are, respectively, less stretchy and seemingly sturdier.

โ€œMy first collection with J.Crew focuses on American classics with subtle alterations that arenโ€™t intended to be attention seeking โ€” but that cannot be ignored,โ€ Babenzien says. If that really was his goal, mission accomplished. โ€œJ.Crew has been synonymous with American style for nearly 40 years, and weโ€™ve honored that heritage by creating clothing that encourages individual style and confidence, with the hope that each piece will outlive trends that come and go.โ€

It just so happens, though, that his first collection closely aligns with a few forming (and fading) trends. Prep has been back for a few seasons now, a benefactor of renewed interest in golf, tennis and the coastal aesthetic. So too is classic menswear but only because no one is forcing it upon anyone anymore: Dress codes are disappearing fast, making dressing up fun, not a formality.

If J.Crew under Brendon Babenzien means more of the same but better, weโ€™ll be treated to a few standout pieces a season, better quality overall and a few surprising collaborations โ€” thatโ€™s for sure. But will J.Crew release collections the Internet clamors for? Incessantly refreshes their web browsers for? Maybe, but Iโ€™m not sure thatโ€™s even the goal.

Brendon Babenzienโ€™s new J.Crew designs will drop on a rolling basis from July through August. You can shop the first segment here.