Photo of Quinn Noyes

Quinn Noyes

United States | Active public archive: 2022-present | Known for: park skiing, SuperUnknown 23, SLVSH, Surface Skis, cap33sh | Current: Surface Skis team rider and video-first park skier



Woodward Copper In Summer Light



Woodward Copper’s summer park sat bright under dry Colorado sun, the rails scraped clean and the landings soft enough to punish lazy balance. Quinn Noyes dropped into that setting against Finn Sharp for a SLVSH battle built around pressure, repetition, and instant response.

That appearance gives the cleanest public snapshot of Noyes right now. He is not documented through a medal-first World Cup résumé. His record is built through park laps, crew edits, Surface Skis clips, Capeesh and Arsenic projects, and Level 1’s SuperUnknown pathway. The useful way to read him is as an emerging American park skier whose credibility is forming through footage, not formal rankings.



Boyne Mountain And The Sorta Archive



The earliest verified trail around Noyes runs through the Sorta archive and Michigan park skiing. Newschoolers listings for Sorta Winter 2022 place him in a long crew cut filmed mostly at Boyne Mountain, alongside Wyatt Dorman, Phoenix Heiny, Caleb Godwin, Jack Anderton, Nicolas Guzzardo, Emre Hinkle, Kevin Langlands, and others.

That setting matters because Boyne Mountain is a repetition hill. Park skiers there build tricks by volume: rope laps, rail hits, small jumps, quick resets, and cold Midwest snow that does not hide mistakes. Noyes’ public development starts inside that kind of crew environment, where filming and skiing are tied together from the beginning.



Sorta Spring And The Wider Midwest Crew



By 2024, Noyes appeared again in Sorta Spring Video 2024, a larger Michigan-centered edit featuring riders such as Sam Spence, Nicolas Guzzardo, Phoenix Heiny, Faelan Coldwater, Dylan Patee, Jack Kaiser, Sam Lobinsky, Carter Dobbins, Will Mastin, Ben Haley, and others.

The value of that archive is continuity. Noyes was not a one-clip name attached to a single park day. His name kept appearing in the same Midwest-driven ski media flow, where skiers carry their own cameras, film each other, and build recognition through shared output. That process fits the modern park scene more than a traditional athlete résumé.



Surface Put His Name On The Team Page



Surface Skis lists Quinn Noyes on its team page, placing him beside riders such as Tommy DeJager, Mathieu Dufresne, Kellan Baker, Jonas Fjelstad, Felix Högland, Albie Bigler, Audrey Friess, and Graham Gray. For an emerging skier, that kind of brand listing gives the public record a stronger anchor.

The partnership also fits the skiing shown in his clips. Surface has long lived close to park, street, and independent freeski culture. Noyes’ lane depends on rails, switch landings, creative takeoffs, compact rotations, and tricks that can be repeated until they look relaxed. That is exactly the kind of skiing where a ski sponsor is less about podium visibility and more about daily output.



THE WRAITH W26 With Tommy DeJager



THE WRAITH W26, published by Surface on Newschoolers, features Tommy DeJager and Quinn Noyes, with filming and editing by Herm. The pairing matters because DeJager gives the clip an established Surface reference point, while Noyes appears as part of the same visual world.

The project keeps him inside a brand-driven park archive rather than a local-only crew feed. It also shows how his current visibility is growing: not through one breakout contest, but through repeated placements in short films, team clips, and rider lists where style and fit matter as much as a single result.



SLVSH Against Finn Sharp At Woodward Copper



The SLVSH matchup against Finn Sharp is Noyes’ most readable pressure test. Prime Skiing published the game in October 2025, describing it as a Summer Vibes battle at Snowpark Woodward Copper. Freeskier also included the matchup in its roundup of new SLVSH games.

SLVSH is useful because it removes hiding places. A skier has to call tricks, match tricks, take misses, reset quickly, and keep skiing clean while the camera stays close. That format rewards switch control, rail discipline, takeoff confidence, and the ability to land tricks without needing a full contest run to build rhythm.



cap33sh With Capeesh And Arsenic



In 2025, Noyes appeared in cap33sh, a collaboration between Capeesh and Arsenic. The Skipowd listing credits Noah Woodford for filming, Ferdinand Dahl for editing, and skiing by Tristan Feinberg, Ferdinand Dahl, Quinn Noyes, and Hans Weiner.

That cast places him near a different layer of freeski culture. Dahl brings Capeesh’s Norwegian contest-and-style identity. Feinberg brings halfpipe credibility. Weiner brings a broader park and freeride video profile. Noyes’ presence in that mix shows his movement from Midwest and Colorado park footage into a more international, brand-linked crew setting.



Wheelhouse And The Convoy Lane



Wheelhouse by Convoy, published on Newschoolers in November 2025, lists Noyes in the order of appearance after George Brown and before Jesse Mast. The edit also includes Louie Glisson, Milo Nicholson, Landen Holcomb, Griffin Gasior, DB Falge, and Ryan Voyten, with Voyten credited for the edit.

That rider order gives another point on the map. Noyes is not tied to one isolated crew. He appears across Sorta, Surface, Capeesh-Arsenic, SLVSH, and Convoy contexts. The common thread is park and rail skiing built for footage: clean lines, shared sessions, technical jibs, and enough personal style to survive inside a crowded rider list.



Banff Sunshine And SuperUnknown 23



Level 1 selected Noyes as a U.S. finalist for SuperUnknown 23, held at Banff Sunshine Village in Alberta, Canada, in 2026. The event moved from Palisades Tahoe to Banff Sunshine because of snowpack conditions, then brought together finalists and pros in the Sunshine Village park.

SuperUnknown is a different checkpoint from SLVSH. It is a video talent search, judged through entries, rider presence, and the ability to stand out among skiers from multiple countries. Noyes did not win the 2026 title, which went to Alex Bateman on the men’s side, but finalist status alone moves his profile into a stronger category of emerging freeski talent.



How Noyes Builds A Park Line



Noyes’ public footage points toward a park-first toolkit: rail slides, switch landings, compact spins, butters, creative jibbing, stable takeoffs, and lines that depend on rhythm more than oversized features. The repeated settings are Boyne Mountain, Mt. Hood-style crew laps, Woodward Copper, Surface clips, and short edits where the skier has to make every feature count.

The next factual checkpoints are already visible: more Surface projects, more crew edits, and whatever comes after SuperUnknown 23. For now, the accurate profile is clear enough. Quinn Noyes is an emerging American park skier moving from Midwest crew footage into brand-backed edits, SLVSH visibility, Capeesh-Arsenic projects, and Level 1’s SuperUnknown stage.

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