Opening pitch: Sandlot Goods’ new workshop puts fresh spin on its best-selling wallet
November 26, 2019 | Paul Cannon
As Sandlot Goods moves deeper into a new workspace off Southwest Boulevard, the six-year-old premier maker is stitching an aesthetic that holds true to its classic appeal but ventures away from hometown branding.
“In the last year, we have been dialing back the overly Kansas City feel,” said Chad Hickman, owner of Sandlot Goods. “We get a lot of orders from out of state online. It has become more of the go-to Kansas City shop for travelers and goers.”
Specializing in leather goods — as well as custom products for wholesale customers like Made in Kansas City and corporate clients, and crossover pieces for its sister brand wlle “drink sweaters” — Sandlot Goods recently relocated to a new space south of the Crossroads, near the state line and Westside neighborhood. The workspace shares a building with fellow makers at Ampersand Design Studio and a coming Made in KC woodshop.
Click here to check out Sandlot Goods’ full lineup.
As seamstresses sew leather pieces onto fabric backing, a laser printer hums nearby in a venture that combines low- and high-tech methods to create its wares. Though product themes have intentionally shifted away from “Kansas City,” Sandlot Goods maintains its links to baseball, an inspiration for the startup’s name as well as its most popular sellers, Hickman said.
“We started with a website and one wallet,” he explained of the venture’s origins in 2013, which began as a side hobby in a photo studio.
Soon after, wholesale deals with stores like Westside Storey and — perhaps most impactful — Made in Kansas City helped propel Sandlot Goods to consistent growth, year after year, Hickman said.
Click here to explore Made in Kansas City.
“I wouldn’t say we wouldn’t be here without the guys at Made in KC,” he said, “but I wouldn’t be having as much fun with this.”
The new workspace isn’t intended to serve as a storefront for Sandlot Goods, Hickman said, noting an expanded kiosk area in the Made in KC Marketplace on the Country Club Plaza essentially now serves as Sandlot Goods’ brick-and-mortar location.

Monarch wallet, Sandlot Goods
Just in time for the holiday shopping season, the company is unveiling a redesigned version of its Monarch wallet — a throwback reference to Kansas City’s sports past that features a design echoing a baseball field in bold new color options.
Click here to check out the Monarch wallet.
Surrounded by a range of tools and piles of leather — often ordered in bulk, 25 to 30 hides at a time — Hickman said Sandlot Goods is a work in progress.
“After a few years of figuring out what we do best, we’ve found the route we wanted to go,” he said.
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
This meal is metal: Elephant Wings rocks concert of flavors with chef’s Indian fusion setlist
Ameet Malhotra’s just-released cover of Indian fusion is fuel to the fire of that which diners’ desire, the chef and owner of Elephant Wings said. Newly opened this month at Parlor KC in the Crossroads, two of the restaurant’s popular menu items include Malhotra’s tikka masala poutine and the Bombay-mi — his version of the…
NXTSTAGE taps trio of KC entrepreneurs to help their companies grow revenue, scale
WICHITA — Three Kansas City startup founders are among 20 early-stage companies selected for the latest NXTUS program aimed at boosting innovation from within urban and rural areas throughout the state of Kansas. Joining the 2024 NXTSTAGE Customer Traction Cohort: Joy Broils, Hustle & Ground, Shawnee; Mark Lukenbill, Mpruv Sports, Basehor; and Crystal Webster, Sharing…
Study with USDA researchers affirms startup’s AI-powered facial recognition for cows can detect sick animals
A collaborative study between an Overland Park animal agtech startup and the U.S. Department of Agriculture successfully corroborated MyAnIML’s predictive ability to proactively manage devastating disease outbreaks in cattle production, the company announced this week. MyAnIML uses first-of-its-kind, proprietary facial recognition and deep learning technology to analyze cow muzzles — accurately predicting Infectious Bovine Keratoconjunctivitis…
KC startup’s bone cancer treatment for dogs earns ‘milestone’ USDA validation
A decade of hard work by a veteran entrepreneur and her Olathe-based team has cleared a significant hurdle on the pathway to licensure as its first-in-class adoptive cell therapy for dog cancer gains a critical nod of approval from federal regulators. ELIAS Animal Health, a leading companion animal cancer therapeutics company, recently announced that the…






