Health scare forced KC’s colorful wax guru to get serious: ‘This is Crumble growing up with me’
February 26, 2019 | Elyssa Bezner
Brandon Love is keeping his iconic, brightly-colored hair, but melting away distractions that could be holding back his already wildly successful, but evolving lifestyle brand, Crumble Co., he said.
The first to go: Some of the eye-catching candle and wax product names that first caught customers’ attention because of their tongue-in-cheek innuendos and four-letter words, said Love, Crumble’s founder and owner.
“[When I started out] I decided I’m just going to do ‘me’ — I’m going to cuss where I want, I’m going to make sexual jokes where I want — and then my dad had a heart attack and everything changed,” the young entrepreneur explained, referencing his parents, who both work alongside him in the venture. “I realized that this company needs to succeed, not just for me but for my family.”
Growing the business from humble beginnings in Baltimore — before moving the operation to the Kansas City metro — Crumble helped Love recover and reboot after a traumatic breakup that had caused him to contemplate suicide, he said. The company later took on a mission to help others through suicide prevention efforts — aided by Love’s personal brand and lighthearted wordplay.
Click here to read more about Love’s beginning stages with Crumble Co.
“[This business] saved my life and it’s helping so many people across the world and I need to take it more seriously,” he added. “I decided to put a filter on my decision of like, ‘Does it serve our mission of connecting people and making people feel welcome?’ If not, it can go on the chopping block.”
Curse words on such products as “Fuck Anxiety” didn’t really serve a meaningful purpose, Love said.
“[The curse words were] a part of our brand, but it’s not our brand,” he said. “I’m just trying to make it palatable for everybody and a more serious company for my family and myself,” he added. “This is Crumble growing up with me.”

A more welcoming experience
Renovations at Crumble’s Bonner Springs storefront just months after opening reflects more of Love’s “fix it as you go” mentality, he said, noting he’d rather not wait for perfection.
“We are breaking down walls and we’ve got pink paint everywhere,” laughed Love, hinting at a lifestyle brand that now goes beyond candles and wax to deliver “treats for bath, body, and home.” “We just want some organization for our own sake and the customers who are coming in to meet us for the first time.”
“We’ve scared some people away,” he added. “They walk in and are just overwhelmed. I’m trying to fix that and make it a more welcoming experience for everybody.”
Click here to shop Crumble Co.
“[The new space in Bonner Springs] is going to be really pretty and more of what you would see in a downtown store — very organized, cute shelves, and a minimalistic style versus the chaos that was Crumble [before],” he said.
Reorienting the company’s product focus on bath and body items has been a recent passion, Love said.
“Now half our product is bath and body, and it’s huge to change half of your product. That’s insane,” he said. “I’ve just fallen in love with [those products] a lot. I’ve had to learn recipes and build these things from scratch based off of what I like and if the ingredients work well for me. I study this nonstop.”
Check out a photo gallery from the Bonner Spring store’s October opening below.
Expansion and engagement
A push toward a stronger wholesale strategy is part of Love’s goal to get Crumble products picked up by Target, he added.
“I love Target so I’m like, ‘Let’s go big or go home,’” Love said. “They have the morals that we care about, [too.]”
Until then, the expanded Bonner Springs space is geared to better engage the Bonner Springs community, he said, noting the second priority after growing the retail concept is allowing space for candle- or soap-making classes.
“We have a lot of space,” he said. “Bonner Springs is a small community, but it’s tight-knit and they know everything that’s going on there. So we want to master building that community aspect.”
After firmly establishing the Kansas location, a new store might appear in the River Market area on the Missouri side, he added, noting a welcome center concept involving coffee is percolating.
“We still need to figure what we need to do to make it a viable concept, but Crumble Cafe might be happening in a River Market near you,” Love teased.
Click here to read more about Crumble’s previous partnership with Betty Rae’s Ice Cream in River Market.

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
City says ‘long overdue’ 18th & Vine plan isn’t a facade for gentrification; effort would bring retail, apartments to blighted district
Editor’s note: The following story was originally published by CityScene KC, an online news source focused on Greater Downtown Kansas City. Click here to read the original story or here to sign up for the weekly CityScene KC email review. ‘The city’s blighted and dangerous buildings have been choking the life out of the district for decades,’ business owner…
New tequila, same family: Why you’ll miss all the shots you don’t take of this soon-to-be iconic KC spirit
They’re among Kansas City’s most popular brands, Andy Miller said, distilling just how crucial it is for the minds behind Spanish Gardens, Perez, and Silva’s to get it right as they launch a new brand: Una Familia Tequila. “There were sleepless nights,” recalled Miller, founder of Una Familia and COO of Spanish Gardens Foods — the…
Whitney Manney’s fresh prints: How one KC designer’s life got flipped-turned upside down by a call from ‘Bel Air’
When the Kansas City-provoked reboot of “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air” begins streaming Sunday, its creator won’t be the only recognizable local name to roll in the credits. “This has been a dream opportunity,” said Whitney Manney, founder of the WHITNEYMANNEY (WM) fashion label, announcing her participation in costuming “Bel-Air” — the dramatic retelling of…
This 11yo kidtrepreneur is skipping past lemonade stands, taking Nelson’s Flavorades straight to the store
A shot of flavor is headed for Hy-Vee as the grocer gives a KCK-raised kidtrepreneur the chance to stock his sellout product in a limited run. “It’s amazing,” Nelson McConnell, the 11-year-old owner of Nelson’s Flavorades, said of the opportunity to sell his lemonade blends on store shelves. Beginning Saturday, customers can visit the Mission…











