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.Crewโs menโs 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 havenโt changed too much.
But thatโs okay, I think?
When Babenzienโs appointment was first announced, no one seemed shocked. It was surprising, sure, but his vision aligned with closely with J.Crewโs, even if Noahโs 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 thereโs Babenzienโs penchant for prep, a style he subverted while with Supreme but has clearly come to appreciate since starting Noah in 2015. Noahโs lookbooks have always felt like what J.Crew could be. Thereโs 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.Crewโs 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 Babenzienโs tenure are already much stronger. If this collection were a cocktail, itโd be three parts J.Crew, one part Babenzienโs new direction โ a subtle, puristโs-opinion-preserving twist on a classic.