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Carlos Nazario: The Kid From Queens Who Changed Fashion Imagery

5/29/20261 hr 19 min

Carlos Nazario  has helped redefine how fashion media expresses subculture in a luxury context, making history along the way as the first Black editor to style a cover for American Vogue.

But he grew up in Queens, New York, in a big Puerto Rican family with no connections to fashion. His grandmother Efna was his earliest influence — a woman who understood, intuitively, the power of how you present yourself to the world and shared a key lesson with him.

That lesson has guided his journey as he left for Paris as a teenager, came home, worked his way through internships at W magazine and Love in London, and spent seven years as first assistant to stylist Joe McKenna. When he went out on his own, he built a creative world that looked like the one he'd grown up in — and started making images that put it at the centre of fashion.

This week on the BoF Podcast, Imran Amed talks to Nazario about the nightlife scene that shaped his creative identity, what it cost to break into an industry that wasn't built for someone like him, and why the pictures that endure are the ones made with heart.

Key Insights:

  • The Insulated Class Barriers of Fashion Publishing: Historically, legacy publications relied heavily on unpaid labor that functioned as a class-based filter. "[It] inherently limits the pool of people who can actually apply for those jobs and sustain them,” Nazario said.
  • The Rigorous Technical Reality of Image-Making: Beyond perceived glamour, corporate styling is an intensive operation demanding physical labour, complex logistics and immense operational precision. People really underestimate the manual labour that's involved,” Nazario says. “You literally are schlepping a rail of clothes up a fucking mountain, or down a beach, or into a dynamic situation where it's 100 degrees or below zero."
  • The Editorial Investment vs. Commercial Reality: Breaking through as an independent creative frequently required substantial personal financial risk and sacrifice. Nazario recalls, "I was making no money. I was doing all these editorials for i-D and for Vogue and flying myself to London and flying myself to Paris... and I was going into severe debt to build a portfolio and to build a name."
  • The Evolution of Modern Media Relevance: The fashion consumers today demand accountability and cultural depth from the publications they follow, rejecting the superficial curation of the past. "We have information at our fingertips, we can see every collection online ... so a magazine can't just be about shopping anymore,” Nazario says. “It has to be about a point of view, it has to be about a narrative, it has to be about a conversation that you're having with the culture."

Additional Resources:


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Clips

Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Speaker 10:00

    This episode of the BOF Podcast is brought to you by Macy's. If you've ever watched a New York-based show and thought, "I wanna dress like that," then this collab is for you. Macy's just dropped a limited edition collection with Molly Rogers, the Emmy Award costume designer who's defined New York fashion on screen for decades. Now she's translating that iconic vision into shoppable pieces through Macy's private brand On 34th, each one with unexpected details that feel like real finds. Shop On 34th and Molly Rogers now in-store or at macys.com.

  2. Imran Amed· Host0:33

    [gentle music] Hi, this is Imran Amed, founder and CEO of The Business of Fashion. Welcome to the BOF Podcast. It's Friday, May 29th. Carlos Nazario has helped redefine how fashion media expresses subculture in a luxury context, making history along the way as the first Black editor to style a cover for American Vogue. But he grew up in Queens, New York, in a big Puerto Rican family with no connections to fashion. His grandmother, Efna, was his earliest influence, a woman who understood intuitively the power of how you present yourself to the world. She shared a key lesson with him early on.

  3. Carlos Nazario· Guest1:20

    Most people will never get to know you. They'll never get to know how smart you are or what your sense of humor is like or where you're from, but they will see you and make that impression last.

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