Mother-daughter businesses connected by sustainability, faith, yearning for community

June 7, 2018  |  Tommy Felts

Quoleshna Elbert, Community Local, and Victoria Bowman, Bow Designs by Spherea

Quoleshna Elbert wants to get — and give — the most bang for her buck, she said.

“I’m the person who wants to kill three birds with one stone,” explained the founder of Community Local, an eco-friendly T-shirt brand based in Kansas City.

Such drive is hereditary.

“We want to be able to go deeper than a conversation with our products,” added Elbert’s mother, Victoria Bowman, who this spring launched her own company, Bow Designs by Spherea. “We want to be able to reach not just the mind, but the heart with what we’re offering to people.”

It begins by recognizing the impact makers can have on the environment and social systems around them, the mother-daughter duo said. A recent conversation about the United States being among the world’s most wasteful countries struck a nerve with Bowman, she said.

“That really took me aback,” she said. “How is it that we’re the land of plenty, but we waste so much? Trying to find a solution is where our businesses blend together.”

Mindful making

Humans can remain the No. 1 priority even if people also work to protect the earth in all they do, Elbert said.

“That’s how my faith plays into it,” she said. “You read in the Bible that human beings are supposed to be stewards of this earth.”

Community Local strives to do its part by using fair-trade, eco-conscious T-shirts produced by Kansas City-based GOEX, an offshoot of the Global Orphan Project.

Each shirt has six plastic bottles in it, which is pretty astonishing,” Elbert said of the 50-percent post-consumer plastic used in the fabric blend. “The other half uses organic cotton that was raised here in the U.S., which is also an eco-friendly product.”

Working with GOEX, a Christ-oriented printer with a social mission, specifically allows Community Local to take a multi-faceted approach to helping their fellow man, she said.

“It’s about understanding how we impact our ecosystems and how our social systems impact us individually, but I also want to empower people to remember their responsibility to their communities and the world around us,” Elbert said. “With Community Local, you’re buying a T-shirt, but you might not realize that the sale helps support workers in Haiti who are earning a living wage to make them.”

The products now are available through Community Local’s website, as well as via a Kickstarter campaign recently launched to help defer startup costs. Elbert also sells her message and wares from a mobile pop-up shop, she said.

“Less is more,” Elbert said. “You don’t necessarily need to have a storefront, even though it’s helpful. Mobility allows you to go wherever you need to go using the resources you have in the best way you can.”

Creating with a purpose

Bowman took a leap of faith with Bow Designs by Spherea, she said.

Making artificial or “forever florals” long has been a hobby, but it took the push from her daughter and a friend to spark the idea for a business emphasizing the arrangements’ sustainability, Bowman said.

“You can put them in the darkest corner and they’ll bring light to a space,” she said. “They’re low maintenance. You don’t have to water them. And they stay beautiful indefinitely — you just have to dust them every so often.”

Coming from a career in corporate paralegal, accounting and administrative work, Bowman’s eyes light up as she discusses the naming conventions and inspirations for her designs.

“It’s a passion,” her daughter explained, “but she’s a generous person by nature. … Her heart is in making sure she’s giving more than a product — she wants to give an experience, something special to reflect that every person is a special creation of God.”

“We’re very much about giving more than what you see on the surface,” Bowman added.

The end goal is to inspire a sense of community with both women’s products, Elbert said.

“We’re creating with a purpose: to bring people together for something more than just networking — for growth,” she said.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Pipeline

    Pipeline rotates The Innovators gala to Omaha for celebration of fellows, incoming cohort

    By Tommy Felts | September 18, 2018

    Pipeline hopes moving its The Innovators gala to Omaha for 2019 will help keep the premier startup event fresh after more than a decade in Kansas City, said Joni Cobb. “Change and experimentation are what Pipeline is all about,” said Cobb, president and CEO of Pipeline. “We are an entrepreneurial organization, and as such we…

    Lesa Mitchell, Techstars Kansas City

    KCultivator Q&A: Lesa Mitchell talks eating eyeballs, remembering names, growing startups

    By Tommy Felts | September 14, 2018

    Editor’s note: KCultivators is a lighthearted profile series to highlight people who are meaningfully enriching Kansas City’s entrepreneurial ecosystem. The KCultivator Series is sponsored by WeWork Corrigan Station, a modern twist on Kansas City office space. Growth is a daily driver, Lesa Mitchell said, but it can be limited by the environment around entrepreneurs. “If…

    STEM education bill

    STEM education bill backed by KC Tech Council passes MO Senate, heads back to governor

    By Tommy Felts | September 14, 2018

    Despite initial pushback, a bill that would broaden access to computer education in Missouri high schools, could be gaining momentum, said Ryan Weber. If passed, the legislation would increase STEM awareness in public schools and require districts to count computer science courses as math and science credits, the KC Tech Council president and an advocate…

    Brody Dorland and Brock Stechman, DivvyHQ

    Beyond language barriers: DivvyHQ partners with translation tech firm for greater global reach

    By Tommy Felts | September 14, 2018

    A newly announced partnership provides DivvyHQ an expanded toolset to open the doors to a global market — translating and delivering any type of marketing-related content across any device, channel or language, said Brock Stechman. “We’ve been working so hard over the past few years to really build this company from the ground up,” said…