Only made in KC: Sandlot Goods revives iconic ‘KC hat’ with 25-step, felt-to-field production
November 17, 2020 | Austin Barnes
The classic, Baldwin-style KC hat is back in the game — boasting a newly drafted team of makers and a modern twist on its otherwise traditional look, Sandlot Goods announced.
“With most major hat manufacturers moving their production overseas, there is a space and a need for a classic, American-made ball cap,” said Chad Hickman, founder of Sandlot Goods, describing the cap’s return to production.
Part of a sizable hat-making operation launched over the past few months within the Sandlot Goods product lineup, it’s believed to be the only truly Kansas City-made hat currently in production.
“I’m a hat wearer, always have been, so the dream of making hats came naturally to me,” Hickman said. “We’ll start with a casual wool leather strap back with the hope of someday making an on-field hat worthy of the MLB.”
The all-wool, 1950s-era hats — previously designed by Kansas City-based Baldwin Denim — were manufactured through Ebbets Field Flannels in the early 2010s, added Adam Pfeifer, a leader on the Sandlot project and former Baldwin employee.
“At one point, the KC hats were so popular that Baldwin was one of Ebbets’ Field Flannels biggest wholesale accounts — up there with J.Crew, if that tells you anything,” Pfeifer said, adding Baldwin was committed to American-made manufacturing and worked with Ebbets until Baldwin folded operations in March at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Click here to learn more about the origins and focus of Sandlot Goods.

KC hat by Sandlot Goods and Made in KC; photo courtesy of Sandlot Goods
The hats debuted on shelves inside Made in KC stores this week, Hickman added, noting the company and Sandlot have become almost synonymous in recent years.
Click here to shop other new arrivals from Sandlot Goods.
“We share a lot of resources like human capital and strategic resources, so to be able to work alongside those guys to help make sure this is a successful endeavor is a really important part of the process,” he said.
“[The Baldwin-style hat] is definitely an iconic Kansas City mark and design,” Hickman continued. “To add another layer to that, where it’s actually made by people in Kansas City, is a really cool thing and that definitely gives us a reason to revisit it.”
Rebooting the design involved a bit of homework and a show of creative respect, he continued, detailing Sandlot and Made in KC’s close work with Baldwin’s legal team — which had no grounds to dismiss the effort, the companies said in a release.
“Sandlot is excited to build upon the legacy of an iconic KC branded product, and will add multiple unique design elements that are only possible through owning the entire manufacturing process,” the release said.
Sandlot’s team of 25 makers embarked on a rigorous regimen of tutorials as they acquired necessary equipment to make the hats, a 25-step process that transforms rolls of wool felt into the stylish, highly-desired caps, Hickman said, noting the effort could be just the beginning of a larger push for 100 percent, Kansas City-crafted goods.
“It’s no secret that we have a big entrepreneurial community here. People want to support local business and I think [this is] going to be really nice for the city,” he said.
Click here to read more about Made in KC’s commitment to small businesses and what its doing to raise the profile of their economic impact.
“Our hope is that we can work with a lot of those different companies and make all of the staple pieces that people look to and think of in [hard to produce categories] and actually make them here in town,” Hickman said. “I think that would be a really special thing.”
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Proof is in the spending: CEO-to-CEO Challenge yields results in diversifying supply chains
Editor’s note: The following story was sponsored by KC Rising, a regional initiative to help Kansas City grow faster and more intentionally, as part of a campaign to promote its CEO-to-CEO Challenge on supplier diversity. When she started researching the institutional knowledge at MMC Corp. about working with diverse suppliers, national purchasing director Kelli Fraas found the process was…
Her new role is reenvisioning one of KC’s most iconic events for entrepreneurs; how Callie England is shaking up GEW
Callie England misses the life of an entrepreneur, she shared, but her new role with the UMKC Innovation Center — and GEWKC — allows her to stay in the game without being on the field. As of January, the veteran Kansas City startup founder is responsible for managing the branding and marketing initiatives of the…
Sand volleyball tourney for early-career professions works to ‘Spike the Stigma’ on mental health
Joining the workforce is no walk on the beach, said Mark Potts, but give him and his teammates a few hours in the sun and sand on a Saturday afternoon and it could be. “Nobody is on their journey alone,” said Potts, president of the Go Further Foundation, explaining the organization’s purpose and its goal…
Sailes closes $5.1M investment round led by STL firm, with KCRise Fund, Wichita VC
The foundation for Sailes has always been solving difficult problems for sales teams, said Nick Smith; the success of a Series A funding round for the startup will power new tools toward that goal. “Everyone is on this AI hype train, and we’ve been for AI for a while. But it’s not just about using…




