Jack Carlson's grand plan for Rowing Blazers
An interview with the founder of Rowing Blazers about growing up in London, being a cultural omnivore, doing the right thing, and making prep suck less.
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The thing about labels
In life, weโre often taught to stay in our lane, do what weโre told, follow the script. In fact, most people prefer to put you (and themselves) in a box. Lifeโs simply easier to explain that way. Living in a box makes you safe. Predictable. And boring.
But every once in a while, you meet someone who doesnโt really fit into any box. They donโt follow rules, they make rules. That someone is Jack Carlson, founder of Rowing Blazers.
Hereโs a conversation we had about coloring outside of the linesโฆ
Tell us about your background. Where were you raised and what were you raised on?
I lived in London as a kid. Think Princess Diana, punks, Brit-pop, Four Weddingsโฆ it was a magical time to live there. We moved to Boston when I was eight or nine, but London left a permanent mark on my sensibilities.
I grew up in a time and place whereโin order to be coolโyou had to wear Abercrombie head-to-toe. Iโm proud to say I wasnโt cool. I was an eclectic dresser. I picked up stuff traveling with my family over the years. Italian soccer jerseys; hand-me-down Lacoste polos from my mom; rugby shirts I bought at cathedrals in England and stadiums in Ireland; bootleg Garfield and Tintin tourist tees I collected in Argentina, Turkey, and at the Great Wall.
I volunteered with a program that the school ran for kids from under-resourced communities that combined basketball skills training with test prep and academic tutoring. I really liked that program, it gave me an understanding that I donโt think many of my peers really grasped, which is how lucky we were to go to a school that had all these sports and languages and arts programs and great teachers and so on.
In Boston, I eventually got into rowing. Rowing was my big passion, and I threw myself into it. In my junior year of high school, we went to this race called Henley Royal Regatta, which is like Wimbledon for rowing. We got knocked out in the first round. So I spent most of the regatta meeting other rowers from other parts of the world and hearing all these crazy stories about their blazers.
The whole experience left me with two things: a burning desire to come back one day and win the whole thing (Iโm a pretty relentless bastard, and after many attempts, I won with a great group of other guys nine years later); and the idea of writing a book about all these crazy blazer stories in the sport of rowing one day.
And how in the hell did Rowing Blazers the brand come about?
It all started with a book I wrote a book called Rowing Blazers.
I thought it would be a niche book for the rowing community, but the next thing I know, Ralph (Lauren) picks up the book and starts hosting events for it. That was my introduction to the clothing industry, and it gave me the inspiration to start my own brand.
Our first product (shocker) was the rowing blazer. Many of the old traditional tailors who used to make blazers for rowing clubs had closed down, and the ones that stuck around had stopped actually making them. They would essentially buy blanks, sew the ribbon around the edges, and put a patch on the pocket. After I wrote the book, lots of clubs started asking me where they could get a proper rowing blazer. The rest is historyโฆ
Making blazers is still an important part of what we do today, but I had always envisioned doing a lot more with the brand, including doing a lot of collaborations.
J.Crew was the first collaboration we ever did. They reached out to us out of nowhere. It was a successful collaboration and it set the stage for what was to come. Since then, weโve teamed up with Barbour, Noah, J. Press, Sperry, Eric Emanuel, Nom Wah, Umbro, Babar, Landsโ End, Harryโs Bar, FILA, the NBA, and many more. These collaborations have helped us reach new audiences, and redefine who we are and what we do.
Weโve also become a multi-brand destination. One thing Iโm proud of is that it gives smaller brandsโincluding many women and BIPOC-owned brandsโa platform to share their stories.
People have described your collections as a mix of high and low... can you expound on that?
Who are we to say what is high and what is low?
Thereโs a great book by Dan Fox that unpacks this idea of what it means to be a cultural omnivore. Thatโs what I try to be, a cultural omnivore. It makes life more interesting. Some people are obsessed with classic menโs tailoring. Or Nike dunks. Or dressing like theyโre in the preppy handbook. Or theyโre obsessed with liking whatever some podcast tells them to like. To me, though,ย itโs more interesting if your interests are diverse. Especially better if what youโre interested in doesnโt follow a particular pattern.
American prep used to feel waspy and gated off to anyone who wasn't white and rich. But RB feels unorthodox, itโs got this inherent disrespect for the incumbent.
Whatโs behind that?
You know, the intention was never to build a brand like that. I just do what feels right and natural, and honestly, Iโm making it up as I go along.
I think โpreppyโ clothes, nostalgia, or vintage-inspired pieces have long felt waspy as a genre because many of the brands behind that look have often perpetuated those stereotypes. I personally just find it all a bit cringeworthy. If I see an ad for a clothing brand and itโs a bunch of white dudes with square jaws and perfect hair and theyโre all together in a rowing boat and all leaning out of the sidesโand for some reason, theyโre all wearing three-piece suits in the boat or somethingโthatโs cringe.
I create Rowing Blazersโ collections and campaigns based on what Iโd like to see in the world.
Iโve always had very eclectic tastes that run from preppy to street, from the 1820s to the 1990s, and everything in between. And Iโm fortunate to have friends who are diverse in their senses of taste and style, as well as in their backgrounds. Everything we do is a reflection of that. Some people say,
โWhy are collaborating with FILA? Itโs too street.โ
โWhyโd you collaborate with J. Press? Itโs too crusty.โ
โWhy are you making sweats? Thatโs not fancy enough.โ
โYour ads donโt look like Bruce Weber photos. Theyโre too rogue, too weird.โ
On and on and on.
But, I think a lot of people appreciate what weโre building. Iโd like to think our campaigns carry a sense of authenticity. By being eclectic, by being a little rogue, by having a healthy sense of irony in everything we do, thatโs what makes what weโre doing less stuffy, less exclusive, and more fun.
I once had an Ivy League rowing coach berate me over email for an Ad that showed two black models wearing tweed suits in a collegiate-looking setting.
โSomethingโs wrong with this picture,โ he said.
I couldnโt believe it. Itโs stuff like this that can ruin your day, your week, your month, and even your year โ not to mention your whole perspective on humanity. But itโs also stuff like this that makes you realize that what weโre doingโwhich I have never thought of as being anything super ground-breakingโactually might be positive.
If youโre pissing off racist assholes, youโre doing something right.
Rowing Blazers, as a brand, feels like an enigma. Your store and products are rife with color, tradition, irony, funk, nostalgia.
Where did you begin to build that persona for the brand?
Rowing Blazers is all a reflection of who I am and my personal tastes. Itโs a blend of so many things that Iโm into; sport, nostalgia, travel.
Itโs old-school British style, but also โ90s New York.
Itโs Japanese Ametora and vintage Benetton and Esprit ads.
If you just see one collection, you wonโt get it. If you just hear the name, you wonโt get it.
I want Rowing Blazers to be something you fall into, like Alice down the rabbit hole.
How is Rowing Blazers actively working to make the brand bigger than itself?
First off, Rowing Blazers is about much more than just โselling product.โ We both partner with and support causes that we believe in. One weekend last yearโearly in the pandemicโwe donated 100% of our proceeds to the NAACP. This was still early in the pandemic, and our own business was in a very uncertain and precarious position. I wasnโt even taking a salary at that time so that we could afford to make payroll for the rest of the team. But to me, it wasnโt even a question.
We also support the AAAD Foundation, which helps collegiate athletes who deal with depression, anxiety, and other mental health issues. These are challenges Iโve faced myself, and itโs important for us to acknowledge an aspect of sports that isnโt talked about enough. Thereโs also Row New York, a non-profit rowing program dedicated to empowering young people through the sport of rowing, regardless of their background or ability.
And then thereโs the Social Change Fund, founded by Dwyane Wade, Carmelo Anthony, and Chris Paul. SCF is focused on ending police brutality, championing criminal justice reform, enabling economic equity, supporting voting and civic engagement, and advocating for the human rights of all black lives. When you buy one of our navy NBA sweaters, we donate a portion of our sales to the SCF.
I hope that our existence and efforts put pressure on larger brands to do more as well.
Where are you taking us with Rowing Blazers?
We have some great collaborations in the works, and each one adds more color to the picture. It adds meaning to what this brand is all about. We donโt do collabs just for the sake of doing them.
Going forward, weโll iterate on blazers and get more into tailored clothing with our made-to-order program. Iโm excited about that because weโve been working hard on it for a long time.
Weโre also going to push ourselves internally. Our leadership teamโwhich is currently half womenโwill become majority women, and even more diverse by early 2022. A few other things weโre investing inโฆ
Weโre also working on getting RWS-certified for our wool sweaters.
Sourcing alternative, sustainable materials for apparel and footwear.
Offering more inclusive sizing for our products.
Some brands shout about this kind of thing from the rooftop more than we do. But to me, itโs more about esse quam videri: to be rather than to seem. Itโs about knowing we are making the right moves for the right reasons, and putting people and the planet before profits.
Most important, weโre going to keep having fun and working on projects that excite us!