How an artisan leatherworker in KC’s historic northeast is making space for more than a hobby

August 27, 2021  |  Austin Barnes

Faye Steiner-Woods, Red Hare Leather

Faye Steiner-Woods returned from a trip to Brooklyn, New York, inspired — eager to prove quality doesn’t have to mean expensive when creativity is used as currency. 

“I wanted to purchase this really expensive, $50 keychain, and it just seemed ridiculous,” Steiner-Woods laughed, recalling their impulse to buy — and the origins of a business venture, Red Hare Leather, that trinket would later manifest. 

“I just looked at it over and over again,” they continued, describing how they studied the piece and its design. “I went to school for art, specifically printmaking. I really love any sort of craft or skill that requires using your hands and your brain — woodworking, painting, making all kinds of things, so it was pretty easy for me to look at it and see how it was constructed.”

“[I was more or less trying to understand] tips and tricks to make it look perfect or well done  —  worth 50 bucks. … I took a bunch of photos of it and came home and made it.”

Successfully stitched and in-hand, the small, coveted piece of leather work started to symbolize something more than a less-expensive alternative to a pricey travel purchase for Steiner-Woods. 

Click here to follow Red Hare Leather on Instagram and see their latest creations.

Red Hare Leather

Red Hare Leather

After seeing their initial work, requests from friends started pouring in for keychains, wallets, and other small trinkets — competing with Steiner-Woods’ own hobby creations, which showed a similar and relentless hold on the then-burgeoning leatherworker. 

“I checked out a few books from the library, watched several YouTube videos, [went to] a couple of different stores and talked to a bunch of other leatherworkers,” they recalled, noting such research resulted in a showing at Hallmark’s Hallmarket. 

“I really dug it. I had thought about maybe jumping into [the small business and maker] field. So it was a good step in that direction  — to be a part of something, but not have to commit completely to it.”

Commitment, however, wasn’t far off, Steiner-Woods added. 

“I ran into a friend from high school, Katie Mabry Van Dieren, who runs the Strawberry Swing [Indie Craft Fair.] She was like, ‘I didn’t know you did this. Come be a vendor at my swing.’ … Once I hooked up with her, it was all over.”

Shortly after the encounter in 2015, Steiner-Woods formally co-founded Red Hare Leather with their twin sibling, Beth Woods. The non-binary, trans, queer-owned leatherworking operation has since established itself as a leader within the Kansas City maker space and small business community.

Faye Steiner-Woods, Red Hare Leather

Faye Steiner-Woods, Red Hare Leather

Steiner-Woods now runs Red Hare as a one-person venture for their home shop in Kansas City’s historic northeast, working to advance queer representation in the local entrepreneurial community through their craft. 

“The queer maker community here is pretty tight. They love each other, they bounce ideas off of each other and they’re definitely here to support each other,” Steiner-Woods said, referencing friends and allies at ULAH, Mid Coast Modern, and Untamed Supply Co., among others. 

Click here to shop the latest creation from Red Hare Leather. Items are also available at Midcoast Modern, ULAH, and Shop Local KC — a brick and mortar outgrowth of Mabry Van Dieren’s Strawberry Swing

“I love that I’m local, I love that I’m queer,” they said. “I think the local movement is a really big movement. Buying local, buying local crafts, buying local art and supporting people — not just corporations — that’s super important to me and I know that my friends and a lot of my customers feel the same way.”

Steiner-Woods hopes to expand the offerings of Red Hare Leather to include classes and skills-based training as the business continues to grow. 

“The thing about leatherwork is that it’s really expensive. Leather is not cheap. The tools are not cheap and you can’t just innovate [and use different] tools. There are certain things that you have to have,” they explained, further detailing a vision for a community-based makerspace.

“I think it’d be really cool to get involved in something like that, where there could be a community tool set or community machinery like die cutting machines and sewing machines, beveling machines and riveting machines.”

In the meantime, Steiner-Woods is focused on raising two young sons, and navigating the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on small businesses — especially those that relied heavily on craft fairs. 

“My goal for 2020 was to reverse my situation and make my full-time job my part-time job and make my leatherwork my full-time job,” they said, referencing work with Sammy’s Window Clothing Closet and FosterAdopt Connect — a secondary passion that would be difficult for them to give up all together. 

“I have two small children, I carry their insurance through my 9-to-5 career and I love what I do. … I built my family through foster care and I love this place. I have a tie-in and a buy-in and I love serving here,” Steiner-Woods continued.

Faye Steiner-Woods, Red Hare Leather

Faye Steiner-Woods, Red Hare Leather

“The pandemic hit and I was grateful that I hadn’t taken that step yet, because I was able to survive — and it wasn’t through leatherwork during the pandemic.”

Despite a recent surge in cases of COVID-19 and its Delta variant, Steiner-Woods is hopeful steps can be taken to correct the intended course of 2020. 

“Now my goal is to kind of push it further. I have a website, but I don’t get a ton of traffic there,” they said. “Having a bigger online presence, doing more wholesale [work] with different stores and different outlets and lessening [my work at] fairs as much as possible.” 

“I make a ton of money at them and it’s also really great networking — not only with other vendors, but the community and customers. … I don’t want to give that up completely, but it is very exhausting being a parent, having a full-time job, having a side hustle and then giving up your whole weekend to do a craft fair can be a little ridiculous.”

Grateful for the success, name recognition, and connections brought on by the craft fair circuit, Steiner-Woods has a bigger vision should such a plan work out in favor of Red Hare Leather. 

“Eventually I think it’d be really awesome to own a brick and mortar,” they said. “I think it would be really awesome to have my stuff in stores in other states. I think it’d be really great to really branch out and do more collaborations with more people as well.”

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

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2021 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    She made kitchens her classroom; now this young foodie has her own Olathe bakeshop

    By Tommy Felts | February 19, 2025

    Oreo cheesecake cookies. Take-and-bake cinnamon rolls. Pina Colado sodas. After seven years as an home-based business in Olathe, Cake Loft now has a storefront and even more attention-grabbing offerings. Owner Chrissy Zemencik’s line includes cakes, cupcakes, decorated sugar cookies, and macarons, as well as gourmet cookies — apple pie, cherry pie, lemon blueberry, brown butter…

    Meet KCSourceLink’s trio of ‘navigators’ now embedded in KC business support hubs

    By Tommy Felts | February 19, 2025

    A new initiative from KCSourceLink that places three experienced business leaders in strategic locations across Kansas City will help aspiring entrepreneurs better connect with the resources and answers they need to start and grow businesses and side hustles, said Becca Castro. “KCSourceLink is making it easier than ever for aspiring entrepreneurs and seasoned business owners…

    NXTUS launches bracket-style pitch competition for Kansas startups with $20K in prizes

    By Tommy Felts | February 18, 2025

    A new, high-energy pitch competition is expected to help startup founders collide with angel investors and innovation leaders from across Kansas — all set against the excitement of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament this spring. The Gamechangers & Champions bracket bash is set for March 21 in downtown Wichita — a one-day bracket-style experience organized…

    Lawmakers redeploy bill to boost veterans as entrepreneurs; targeting easier access to capital, credit

    By Tommy Felts | February 18, 2025

    Bipartisan legislation to help veteran small business owners and entrepreneurs overcome barriers on the home front is back in Congress, with backing from two area lawmakers who say the time is now to get resources to those who served. U.S. Rep. Sharice Davids, D-Kansas, introduced the Successful Entrepreneurship for Reservists and Veterans (SERV) Act alongside…