With parents from Mexico and a San Diego upbringing, Jonathan Cohen was a product of the cultural heritage he was exposed to growing up. In high school, he would see the surfers changing out of their wet suits into their school outfits with only the ease and laid-back nature that one from a beach town could.
He was surrounded by strong willed individuals who loved to immerse themselves in the colors and textiles reminiscent of their childhood. Eventually, when Cohen moved to New York City, the modernity of Manhattan and the on-the-go fluidity of the city shaped his design direction and inspiration – which eventually shaped the Jonathan Cohen woman. The Mexican prints, patterns, and colors, the laid-back ease of the San Diego surf culture, and the modern city approach have manifested into what the brand has become. Cohen met business partner Sarah Leff while attending Parsons School of Design. Together, they formally launched Jonathan Cohen in 2011. After he received much recognition and encouragement from his peers and teachers for his senior thesis, he left New York and spent a year in California, where he continued to build upon his senior thesis by creating new pieces and silhouettes aligned with his final school project.
He came back to New York City, connected with Leff, and had his thesis (along with those new items he created while on the West Coast) photographed into a re-interpreted look book. Together, they selected a group of editors and stores and sent out their materials to gain market reaction. The attention was organic and began to build slowly, and as the conversations started to evolve, so did the definition of who the Jonathan Cohen woman is. She’s an artistic female who values the story of the brand and the pillars in which it is built upon. She’s a multi-dimensional woman who cannot be defined by a singular quality ... and those descriptors are constantly evolving. She is someone who has many facets that shape her sense of self and awareness.
She’s a woman who values quality over quantity, values the craftsmanship that goes into creating her garments, and, when she spends money on a piece, she wants to make sure when she puts it on, she feels both unique and special.