KC designer’s new deck of cards celebrates Black icons who refused to play the hands they were dealt
February 10, 2021 | Austin Barnes
Learning and celebrating Black history should be in the cards for more than just the month of February, Kearra Johnson said, unveiling a new design project that’s set to hit metro store shelves soon.
“I really just want to create fun ways to get serious conversations started for the younger generation,” explained Johnson, founder of Kansas City-based Studio Lo and designer of the newly released Revolution Card Deck — a standard deck of playing cards, celebrating such Black icons as Michelle Obama, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and Rosa Parks.
“All of the figures that are represented in this deck have played a role in American history as a whole [and] changed the way we as Blacks are allowed to operate in society,” Johnson continued, detailing her inspiration for the playing cards, which quickly caught the attention of curators at Made in KC.
“It was a pretty cool connection to make because there’s opportunity for future collaborations,” she said of her experience landing a spot among the local retailer’s Kansas City-made and designed goods and what it means for the future of her growing brand as a digital artist.
“I’m excited for the product to be able to reach that many people — and it’s an expansion of my audience. People who I probably wouldn’t have contact with are going to have my object in their possession.”
Click here to purchase a Revolution Card Deck for $25 or here to connect with Johnson on Instagram.
Originally designed as a class project during Johnson’s time at The University of Missouri, she nearly folded work on the cards upon graduating in 2020, she recalled.
“At first I was hesitant to do it, because I had never seen it done before, but then I was like, ‘You know, this could be cool.’”
Johnson’s classmates and professors agreed.
“A professor at the University of Missouri found my portfolio website and she sent me an email,” Johnson recalled, noting the professor wanted to give the cards to students in her graduate classes, but a critical problem remained: they didn’t yet physically exist.
Instead of turning down the opportunity, Johnson showed her hand and used the request as a starting point for bringing her work to market.
And with 500 decks now headed for Made in KC store and online shelves — potentially arriving as soon as this week — there’s no looking back, she added.
“To see your passion and people respond to it so well is rewarding,” Johnson said. “I always knew that it was a really cool idea, so it was exciting for me to get it into the hands of people.”
More than an entrepreneurial opportunity or a conversation starter, the card deck represents her commitment to using her artistic abilities to give back to her community.
“I’ve learned through my entrepreneurial journey that you just have to be open to talking about what you do and open to sharing your creative ideas with people,” she said, noting her day job as a graphic designer at Kanbe’s Markets — a job she landed as a result of an internship with HireKC, an employment initiative started by former KCMO Mayor Sly James and now managed by KC Social Innovation Center.
“When I got [to Kanbe’s Markets], I really just dove in. I wasn’t afraid to highlight my skills and talents and they noticed that and loved it — and in return, I get to do some really dope projects.”
Working on projects like the nonprofit micro market’s annual fundraising campaign, Grassroots Growers, Johnson has found a niche — using her talents to spread positive messages within the community she’s grown up in.
“I get to design for change and it’s just really, really rewarding,” she said.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn
Featured Business

2021 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Now in new Crossroads space, Rightfully Sewn prepares to welcome male sewists (Photos)
The secret to any startup venture is to move forward one stitch at a time, said Rightfully Sewn founder Jennifer Lapka. “Start small, struggle, have success, then scale,” she said, quoting one of her many mentors. Freshly moved into a 2,200-square-foot atelier, or design studio, at 1800 Wyandotte St. in the Crossroads, Rightfully Sewn is…
CommunityAmerica teen-led innovation effort lauded for developing college cost calculator
College degrees come with two price tags: the sticker price and the net price. A new free tool from the CommunityAmerica teen advisory board is being celebrated for helping students solve the complicated equation that separates the two — as well as determine which college options are financially realistic. “[With] some of the more elite schools,…
Fishing Caddy inventor pours family business into new product: Anywhere Cup Holder
Joe Pippins’ latest invention — the Anywhere Cup Holder — can support as much as 50 pounds in a single cup, he said. It’s a solution that serves the needs of everyone from mechanics and fishing enthusiasts to gardeners and people who entertain in their homes, said Pippins, founder of Live Holdings, which produces the…
Selling ‘the infinite commodity’: Farmobile leverages blockchain to build secure data store
With more than a million acres of field data amassed by Farmobile, farmers now need an exchange to securely connect them with buyers of the digital machine and agronomic information they’ve harvested, said Jason Tatge. A newly opened Farmobile DataStore, which leverages elements of blockchain technology fueled by Intel Sawtooth and Amazon Web Services to…





