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19 Dec

Malbon Golf Breaks the Mold With Untraditional Product, Collabs

Malbon Golf Breaks the Mold With Untraditional Product, Collabs

The gathering features nontraditional styles.

Stephen Malbon needed to seek out a latest group of friends.

The creator of Malbon Golf has been a fan of the sport since he was 12, but because his buddies had little interest in the game, he gave it up for a few years.

He returned to the sport as an adult — even taking a job as a caddie during college so he could golf at no cost on Mondays — and “got obsessed again.”

Although he played on and off over time as he moved across the country for varsity and to launch his creative agency, golf was all the time at the back of his mind.

However it only became a business when he began posting concerning the sport on Instagram. It didn’t take long for his golf-hating buddies to inform him to stop and he realized “golf has a nasty status,” he said, particularly amongst young people. “Everyone said, ‘We don’t care about golf, please stop.’”

So to spare his friends from having to ascertain out posts about courses and equipment, he created a latest Instagram account, Malbon Golf, where he could indulge his passion without the pushback. Soon after, he realized he had amassed a following amongst other golf enthusiasts who enjoyed the five to 10 images a day he posted of “classic to obscure weird golf stuff,” he recalled with fun.

The seed of a business was planted.

“My wife said, ‘I believe we now have something here,’” Malbon said.

Since launching his company in 2017, Malbon and his wife Erica have managed to construct a brand that straddles the world of traditional golf and street style. Because it describe on its website, Malbon Golf is a “lifestyle brand inspired by the sport of golf.”

He explained: “It became obvious that there was room for a golf brand that wasn’t stuffy.”

The Yacht Club Collection features lifestyle pieces for on and off the course.

Prior to now few years, it has partnered with such larger corporations as Nike, Dockers, Spyder, Latest Balance, Budweiser and Wheels Up and developed a following amongst “creative, stylish and energetic people” who’re interested in a line with “unmistakable branding and playful curation.”

The road has been seen on everyone from Justin Bieber to Travis Scott, and its two retail stores on Crosby Street in Latest York’s SoHo and in Carmel, California, within the shadows of the legendary Pebble Beach links, are popular spots for golf aficionados and others who’re drawn to its distinctive logo — a cartoon-link golf ball keen on bucket hats — and nontraditional apparel and footwear.

“We actually did all the pieces backward,” he said. “We developed a community and an audience first after which saw what they needed.”

The brand began with hats after which moved into polos and other golf-skewed items corresponding to quarter-zips that might be worn on or off the course. Today, it offers a spread of polos, shorts, chinos, hoodies and other traditional silhouettes in non-traditional patterns.

Although neither of the Malbons had worked directly in fashion, each had an entrepreneurial bent. Erica Malbon founded The Now, a spa and massage parlor, and her husband began Frank151, a creative agency that worked with clients including Toyota, ESPN, Coca-Cola, HBO and Nike and likewise published a streetwear-skewed magazine of the identical name.  

The goal of Malbon Golf, he said, is to introduce young people to the game and probably the greatest ways is thru fashion. Although he’s worked with plenty of different brands, he said probably the most successful collaboration so far has been with Beats by Dre. Together, they created a small speaker that might be placed on the dashboard of a golf cart and helped introduce the brand to a latest customer segment.  

Now it’s time for Malbon to launch a latest line that pushes the envelope again. Called the Yacht Club Collection, it’s inspired by each his love for the water and the game of golf.

In his dreams, Stephen Malbon and his family are sailing all over the world on a yacht, making stops at different locations to disembark and shoot a round. “And you have got to wear clothes,” he said. “You would like linen polos and seersucker suits and button-up shirts.”

Because of this, the offering will include seersucker shirts, linen blazers and pants, linen bowling-style shirts, cardigans, knit vests, graphic pocket T-shirts and polos, together with hats, golf bags, towels, head covers, passport holders, duffels and even toiletry bags and a floating key chain. Prices will range from $42 to $395.

“It’s more of a way of life collection for individuals who like to golf,” he said. But it might probably even be worn on the course. “There’s nothing to say you possibly can’t play in a linen shirt,” he said.

To advertise the gathering, which comes out on Tuesday and might be sold on the brand’s website and at its two U.S. stores, Malbon has tapped former pro golfer Jesper Parnevik, who is understood for his eclectic and colourful fashion selections, and his daughter Peg to seem within the campaign, which was shot on a ship in addition to on a golf course.

“He used to wear a cycling hat on the course and ties with vests,” Malbon said. “He really pushed the envelope.”

So Parnevik matches squarely in Malbon Golf’s wheelhouse. And it just may serve to bring the road to a different level.

As Parnevik put it: “I really like Erica and Stephen and what they’re doing in golf, but I didn’t join them to influence what people wear on the course — been there, done that. I actually think they’ll change the world.”

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