Watch: Tigersheep Friends creators build a ferociously off-beat, under-the-radar KC brand
August 6, 2019 | Rashi Shrivastava
From three-eyed leopards to strawberry cream giraffes, the creative minds behind Tigersheep Friends love illustrating off-beat versions of animals to keep their artistic passions alive, said Sarah Walsh.
When the husband-and-wife duo started the company in 2011, they were looking for an alternate creative outlet, said Sarah Walsh, co-founder of the online product line.
Click here to check out Tigersheep Friends.
“I loved my job at Hallmark, but I really needed something to call my own and to have a purpose. It’s fun to make something … And you’re like, ‘I don’t know, maybe someone else will like it.’ So you put it up online,” she said about the couple’s quirky designs that are sold on Etsy as well as at select retail shops.
The name “Tigersheep” bounced across a conversation with friends, said co-founder Colin Walsh before they realized the juxtaposition would be an apt name for their company.
Though Tigersheep is their “side hustle,” sales of their products have been booming, he said.
“We try to put in as many hours as we can and burn the midnight oil. Slowly, we’ve started receiving more and more orders from all over the world,” Colin Walsh said, recalling that the couple sold 67 pieces of their best seller, the three-eyed leopard design.
The two product designers-turned entrepreneurs found creative inspiration in each other before they got married, said Sarah Walsh.
“I was always into graphic design and I always drew even when I was a kid, but I hadn’t done it in a while. And she made me remember why I wanted to be an artist in the first place,” Colin Walsh said.
Tigersheep Friends partners with a Los Angeles based company called Printful, which produces their illustrations on everyday products like coffee mugs, T-shirts, pillows and tote bags, he said.
“When we make art we keep in mind that this tiger style pillow will be on somebody’s couch brightening up their homes or this Dire Wolf painting will be on somebody’s wall,” the founders said, completing each other’s sentences.
Craft fairs like Strawberry Swing in Kansas City give artists more exposure and opportunities for community building, said Colin Walsh.
“Just going to these pop up shops and Strawberry Swing, we’re building our brand. We have fans now that come by our booth, and they’re really stoked about the fun orange on the bike, or the fun new pillows that we’re making,” Colin Walsh said.
This story was produced through a collaboration between Missouri Business Alert and Startland News.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Despise doggie duty? It’s only No. 10 on startup’s list of pet peeve tasks people don’t want to do themselves
One in four Kansas City residents say they’ve become worse at handling awkward tasks since the pandemic began, according to a new survey by local services marketplace Airtasker. Among the most biting tasks KC wants to avoid: picking up dog poop from someone else’s lawn. Airtasker, which acquired Kansas City-based startup Zaarly in May 2021,…
Overland Park startup wins four pilot projects through NXTUS health competition
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, which leads a collaborative, nationwide effort to identify and remove large and small barriers to new business creation. WICHITA…
Inside-the-box thinking: Veteran entrepreneurs craft memory care tools to engage dementia patients
The founders of one of Kansas City’s celebrated small businesses are launching a new solution for dementia care: a curated, monthly subscription box full of themed engagement activities and tools designed to improve patients’ quality of life. Prairie Elder Care’s Michala Gibson and Mandy Shoemaker originated the idea for the Connectivities subscription tool during the…
KC data platform mySidewalk partners with GoDaddy to launch online economic insight tool
A new tool from Kansas City’s mySidewalk and GoDaddy’s Venture Forward research initiative is expected to give local and regional policymakers in the U.S. unprecedented — and direct — access to information on the economic impact of more than 20 million microbusinesses, said Stephen Hardy. “At mySidewalk, we work every day with leaders across the country…


