From Supreme to Noah: Brendon Babenzien's Purposeful Journey
Jan 2, 2024
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Brendon Babenzien, a fashion entrepreneur with roots in the skateboarding and alternative music scene, shares his journey from Supreme to Noah. He discusses his creative direction focused on building a well-intentioned business. The podcast touches on the significance of finding strength and community outside of mainstream culture, consumer behavior and creating change, the challenges of contemporary values, achieving work-life balance, and exploring the resonance of new values in a post-pandemic culture.
Brendon Babenzien's journey from skateboarder to fashion entrepreneur is rooted in his unique cultural access and commitment to challenging mainstream culture.
Babenzien's brand Noah focuses on sustainable business practices and building a well-intentioned business that fuses style with substance.
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Brendan Babenzien's Journey from Outsider to Business Owner
Brendan Babenzien, former creative director of Supreme, shares his journey from being an outsider in skate and surf culture to becoming a respected figure in the fashion industry. His interest in style and an intention to build a contemporary business that considers social responsibility led him to establish his own brand, Noah. Babenzien emphasizes the importance of creating products responsibly, taking into account the well-being of those involved in the production process.
The Impact of Streetwear on Luxury Fashion
Babenzien reflects on his time at Supreme, witnessing the rise of streetwear as it infiltrated the luxury sector. He acknowledges the rapid growth and popularity of streetwear but also expresses concern over its transformation into mainstream culture, losing some of its underground and rebellious origins. Despite this, he remains focused on staying ahead of the curve and pushing the boundaries of contemporary fashion.
Challenging the Hyper-Consumer and Information Age
Babenzien raises concerns about the hyper-consumer and information age, where constant access to information has resulted in shallow and superficial cultural values. He advocates for disconnection from technology and a return to being present in the world. Babenzien values time and emphasizes the importance of leading a balanced life, prioritizing personal time, and being present for family and personal passions.
Brendon Babenzien offers a look into his trajectory from a skateboarder immersed in the alternative music scene between Long Island and New York City to the forefront of fashion. His journey is a testament to his unique cultural access and entrepreneurial spirit. Inspired by the convergence of hip-hop, punk, new wave, and rave cultures during his teenage years, Babenzien recognized early on that the future lay outside mainstream culture. His skateboarding roots instilled a sense of belonging in the cultural periphery, a theme he later translated into the foundational ethos of his brand Noah, a staple in the New York menswear luxury realm.
Babenzien discusses his evolution, from his early days at Supreme in 1996 to the launch of Noah in 2002 to the present moment, which is, for him, marked by a commitment to ethics over aesthetics, emphasizing sustainable business practices. He views creative direction as not merely about premium clothing design but the creativity involved in building a well-intentioned business.
Babenzien encapsulates his philosophy—fusing style with substance, challenging mainstream culture, and championing a future where conscious choices redefine contemporary values.
Episode Highlights:
Upbringing: Growing up skating and in the alternative music scene between Long Island and New York City, a serendipitous meeting in Babenzien’s teenage years with Don Busweiler ultimately led to his interest in fashion.
Cultural access: Babenzien’s proximity to surf and skate cultures coincided with a “unique window of time where there was a lot of firsts.” Hip-hop, punk, new wave, and rave culture made an impression on him as a teenager.
“This stuff we’re into is the future”: he recognized from an early age that scenes outside the mainstream culture were the future and capitalized on that reality.
Skateboarding culture and being a “freak”: Babenzien locates the importance of making meaningful friendships that cultivate a sense of belonging, even on the cultural periphery.
Building a brand: He doesn’t consider creative direction to be “terribly creative,” arguing that the business infrastructure and upkeep takes a more creative toll than clothing design.
An organic process: living in and near New York City culture in a combination of subcultural worlds naturally lent itself to fashion design and product marketing, especially when he felt represented by certain brands, like Stussy.
Joining Supreme in 1996, Babenzein had the cultural references to create a certain style but had to learn the business management and operation as he went along
From underground to mainstream: speaking on how street style has infiltrated the luxury sector and mainstream fashion, Babenzein says that while he himself is always looking for growth and the next thing, his ethos of earning access comes from his skate roots.
Ethics over aesthetics: Babenzein’s idea of what’s punk has evolved over the years, moving from rebelliousness to real action, which informed his establishment of Noah, a brand existing “intersection of lifestyle and fashion.”
“A long arc”: Babenzein spent two decades learning about the intersection of environment and fashion business in the process of launching Noah. “There wasn't so much an aha moment, as it was this slow build to get there.”
Future-forward: Babenzein cites getting married and having a child as moments when he knew the importance of sustainability.
Luxury and sustainability: Noah garments comes at high price point to reflect the premium quality and ethical standards set in place for factory workers.
“I'm not Yohji”: As a creative director of a brand with simple collections Babenzein sees Noah’s value in the idea behind the label rather than in the clothing itself.
On J.Crew: Babenzein likes that the scale of the brand and its resources enable him to produce clothing at an accessible price point and that he brings to the company a transformed idea of internal culture.