Bearded Fellas shave away ‘just a doll’ — leaving the beauty of everyday magic, people

October 22, 2021  |  Amelia Arvesen

Bearded Fellas

Ali Bustos didn’t even know how to sew when she was gifted a sewing machine by her parents in 2008. More preoccupied with painting at the time, the machine sat mostly unused. 

But when her first son was born, it was difficult to paint with a wiggly baby in her arms, she said. 

Brian and Ali Bustos family, Bearded Fellas

Brian and Ali Bustos family, Bearded Fellas

Her yearning for a creative outlet persisted, and she pivoted to a new medium that was more kid-friendly. She started by embroidering the silhouettes of people and animals onto pillows for her son to hold. Eventually, she made her first doll for him.

It looked less like G.I. Joe or a Ken doll and more like her husband, who she described as tall and lanky with a big beard. 

“I just thought it was kind of messed up that there were no dolls for boys,” she said. “I wanted my son to learn how to be nurturing and loving. Why is that not encouraged for boys?”

The endeavor continued. She kept making the soft toys as baby gifts for friends and family, and was soon after encouraged to start selling them under the name Bearded Fellas.

“When I started Bearded Fellas, they were dolls, but they became more of an artistic expression,” she said. “I know people will look at them and be like, ‘Oh, that’s a doll.’ To me, it’s an anthropomorphic textile. It’s painting with fabric.”

Bustos crafts dolls in all shapes, sizes, forms, and colors, from people to woodland creatures — each piece inspired by her love of people-watching.

People are just so beautiful,” she said. 

Click here to explore the Bearded Fellas website.

She grew up on both sides of Kansas City’s state line, where she was surrounded by a diversity of cultures at home and school, she said.

Bustos studied architecture and painting at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. And while she has traveled the country and abroad, Kansas City will always be home, she said.

She lives downtown with her husband and four children, ages 4 to 11.

Stacked in a hutch along one wall of her studio are squares of patterned fabric in every color of the rainbow. The room is in organized disarray, often with dolls’ limbs hanging from that same sewing machine.

She typically works in groupings or collections that reflect her mood and personal seasons — more earthy for mellower times, brighter for energetic times, as an example. 

Her children are highly involved in the design process, voicing their opinions about a doll’s hairstyle, clothes or beard. And despite whatever is going on in their lives at the time, her husband, Brian, always makes sure she spends some precious solo time in the studio. 

“I find that I’m a nicer human if I’ve been here for a while,” she said.

Bearded Fellas

Bearded Fellas

While the dolls fill an artistic need for Bustos, she has learned over almost 11 years of making them that they also represent something special for her customers.

The first piece she sold was an African-American doll with glasses on display at the coffee and art space Oddly Correct. It went to a family that had just adopted a child from Ethiopia, and they wanted a toy to which their child could relate.

Bustos has cried with customers who have lost children and observed others connecting with the dolls in ways she didn’t even expect, she said. One man told her that he had never seen his skin tone represented before in such a beautiful way, she recalled.

If not every doll sells out right away, that’s OK, Bustos added. She’s grateful for everyone who has supported the Bearded Fellas journey, and has made peace with the fact that they’ll go to the right home one day. It means she just gets to spend more time with them.

“I don’t just want them going to anybody,” she said. “I want them to go to their own family where they’re needed, where they’re wanted, where they’re loved because a lot of love goes into them.”

This winter, a limited number of Bearded Fellas will be available at Shop Local Kansas City at 3630 Main Street, Seven Swans Creperie at 1746 Washington Street, and the Bearded Fellas website. She’s also selling stitched dad and baby pairs at ONEderChild, a toy store in Solvang, California.

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.

Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2021 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        C2FO accesses $30M investment with World Bank-backed IFC to expand KC firm’s working capital platform

        By Tommy Felts | April 14, 2025

        A just-announced capital infusion for Leawood-built C2FO reflects a shared commitment with global partners to boosting jobs and strengthening economic opportunities — notably for micro, small and medium enterprises in emerging markets worldwide. The $30 million funding round features investment from the International Finance Corporation (IFC), a member of the World Bank Group, and existing…

        Park capping I-670 gets an official name: South Loop project to honor longtime Republican bridge-builder

        By Tommy Felts | April 12, 2025

        Kansas City’s high-profile South Loop Project — a proposed sustainable urban park capping a portion of I-670 — now has a name that pays homage to a leader who played a key role in launching the project: Roy Blunt Luminary Park. “As a working title, the South Loop Project has served us well,” said Jeff…

        Not just a pet project: Why this KC e-commerce team adopted a dog supplement brand as its own

        By Tommy Felts | April 12, 2025

        The Morgans — the family behind Marknology, a bootstrapped digital marketing firm specializing in Amazon sales — are taking a dog supplement brand that they built as a client to the next level now as owners, they shared. Waggedy — veterinarian-formulated supplements to keep dogs healthy and active, launched by Ben Bellinson in 2015 in…

        She’s the mixologist of melt: Jess Priemer blends a cocktail of Kansas City into candle scents

        By Tommy Felts | April 10, 2025

        With niche blends like 18th & Vine (whiskey, tobacco, and rose) and KC BBQ (hickory, oak, and BBQ sauce), Jess Priemer evokes memories and local landmarks with the lighting of each wick. Her candles are the best part of what makes Kansas City uniquely home, she said. “I love this city, like everybody else around…