We’re all going to die: What’s more inclusive than death? asks KC’s favorite doomed streetwear brand
February 4, 2023 | Channa Steinmetz
Wasteland Society is for the strange; those who believe that there’s no such thing as “normal”; people who recognize the reality that sadness is part of life, and that’s OK, the duo behind the irreverent apparel company detailed.
“Whenever people ask us what we stand for, I always say existentialism with inclusion,” said Peter Nonprasit, who founded the Kansas City-based streetwear brand with his wife, Sarah Dye-Nonprasit, in 2017.
“Because at some point we’re all going to die, so we need to stop being really terrible people and just try to help each other out.”
Wasteland Society combines the ideologies from punk, post punk, grunge and counter culture aesthetics — with an emphasis on inclusion, existential angst and despair.
“We recently had an archive sale that featured our previous collections, and we were pulling clothes from five years ago,” said Dye-Nonprasit. “It was cool to see how Wasteland Society’s style has evolved, but our messaging stays the same.”
For Nonprasit, his view on life has been greatly impacted by trauma he faced as a teenager, he shared. Doctors discovered he had osteosarcoma — a type of bone cancer — below his knee when he was 19.
“It’s something I’m still trying to deal with to this day,” Nonprasit said, noting that creating designs for Wasteland Society is a way for him to express thoughts on personal hardships.
All of Wasteland Society’s apparel is screen printed in-house using water-based inks on ethically-sourced garments, the couple said — noting that they are committed to going against the grain and creating on their own terms.
“It’s definitely a labor of love,” Dye-Nonprasit said. “We print out of our garage, so whatever temperature it is outside is the temperature that we’re working in. We’re trying to figure out a better balance this year. We’ll still be printing our own stuff, but we’re going to incorporate more embroidery and patches and possibly partnering with other local businesses.”
Click here to shop Wasteland Society’s online collection.

Wasteland Society products at the 2023 Lunar New Year celebration at MADE MOBB
Bad days turn into business plans
A couple months after tying the knot in 2017, Dye-Nonprasit recalled a particularly bad day of work at her previous corporate job.
“I knew I couldn’t work for someone else forever, and Peter is a graphic designer by trade,” she said. “We sat down and figured out what we wanted the future to hold for us.”
“I’ve always been into clothes and design,” Nonprasit shared, explaining how his passion for apparel grew in the early 2000s as he closely followed sneaker brands and Japanese streetwear. “… It went from this idea to ‘Let’s do this. Let’s invest in a business and get our hands dirty.’”
The duo taught themselves to screen print through YouTube videos, which came with successes and failures, they candidly shared.
“The first screen printing press we bought was a nightmare because it was wooden,” Nonprasit said. “There was sawdust everywhere, and this fear of getting cut on the wood.”
“We quickly sent that one back,” Dye-Nonprasit said, laughing.
Since the conception of Wasteland Society, Nonprasit knew he wanted his designs to be inspired by mental health, music and pop culture — rather than making Kansas City-specific apparel.
Despite that intention, Nonprasit’s few tongue-in-cheek Kansas City designs have been some of the brand’s most popular, he shared. A few of these designs include: a shirt that read “Bandwagoner” in the Kansas City Chiefs iconic gold and red colors, and a T-shirt and sweatshirt collection that simply reads “Generic Kansas City Shirt” and “Generic Kansas City Sweatshirt.”
“I call [the Generic Kansas City Collection] our crowned jewels; I usually hide them in the back of our racks at pop-ups because I don’t want them to be at the forefront,” Nonprasit said. “I never want to be pigeonholed, but those designs also really paid the bills and kept us going in the beginning.”
View this post on Instagram
Building a community
Wasteland Society steadily grew its presence on social media in its first few years, but the couple had difficulty in finding their target audience in Kansas City, Dye-Nonprasit said.
“There was a very real moment during the pandemic when Wasteland was almost not a thing anymore,” Dye-Nonprasit admitted, noting that they opened a small storefront in North Kansas City in 2019 but had a falling out with the building owners in 2020.
“2021 came around, and we were like ‘What are we going to do?’” Dye-Nonprasit continued. “That was when Jackie [Nguyen] from Cafe Cà Phê reached out and asked us if we wanted to pop-up with her. She had no idea the impact she had on our business and how she truly changed the trajectory of where we were going.”
It all started with Cafe Cà Phê’s “Christmas in July” event in 2021, with various vendors popping up in the parking lot of Sequence climbing in the Crossroads Arts District.
“I didn’t realize that the demographic I was looking for was the demographic that supported [Cafe Cà Phê] — you know, very diverse people all of all races, orientations, ages,” Nonprasit said. “Just people who are trying to figure out who they are and being able to freely express themselves in a safe place. That is what Wasteland is all about.”
Click here to read more about Cafe Cà Phê, Kansas City’s first Vietnamese coffee shop.
The pop-ups and partnerships continued with Wasteland Society designing merchandise for Cafe Cà Phê and other vendors — such as Devoured Pizza — they met through pop-up events.
“We truly have a great community of other small business owners, and that’s been huge,” Dye-Nonprasit said. “They have our backs and invite us to events, and I think that’s been one of the biggest parts of our success.”
Check out the screen printing process for Wasteland Society’s latest Lunar New Year design, then scroll down to keep reading!
View this post on Instagram
‘A Pain That I’m Used To’
The duo is looking forward to continuing to experiment and express themselves through Wasteland Society in 2023, Nonprasit shared. In early February, Wasteland Society plans to release its first collection of the new year: “A Pain That I’m Used To.”
“[It is] a collection about the acceptance of coexisting with our current existence,” Nonprasit explained. “We are forced to numb ourselves to the pain and struggles of an uncertain future. Life shouldn’t be this hard, but it is, and we have to be prepared for imminent doom sooner than later.”
Wasteland Society is also set to expand beyond T-shirts in order to offer customers a variety of products, while giving Nonprasit more creative freedom.
“We have baseball jerseys and water bottles coming out because I have clever things I want to put on there,” he said. “We made fanny packs and bags this past summer, which sold like crazy.”
“We’re going to be looking into products along the lines of lighters and ashtrays,” added Dye-Nonprasit, noting the new business opportunities created by the legalization of recreational marijuana in Missouri. “Because it’s something that we definitely support.”
The Wasteland Society duo also hopes to travel outside of Kansas City in 2023 to connect with strangers across the country, Dye-Nonprasit said.
“We’re looking at doing this really big maker [festival] called Renegade in Chicago,” Dye-Nonprasit said. “It is important for us to continue to get our name out there and continue to spread our message.”
For those who run into Wasteland Society at pop-up events, the couple encourage them to stop by for a conversation about music, movies or the meaning of life, they said.
“We are the people who were sitting on the couch playing video games 20 minutes before,” Nonprasit said, laughing. “We just want to make genuine connections with the people who want to talk to us.”
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Blooom announces layoffs, new strategic focus on consumers
Refocusing its outbound efforts to solely target consumers, financial tech startup Blooom has laid off nearly a third of its staff and a top executive has resigned. The Leawood-based company recently announced that it has let go of 10 employees as it moves resources away from marketing to enterprises and will refocus on direct-to-consumer marketing.…
Report: KC is a tech hub but labor shortage is hampering growth
Each day, Kansas City is better positioning itself to be the Midwest’s tech hub. But for Kansas City to realize its full potential, tech leaders, policymakers and the community need to do more to cultivate homegrown talent, KC Tech Council president Ryan Weber said. “Attracting talent from another city is a very small game — and…
KC tech startup partners with Children’s Mercy to help diagnose, manage care
Kansas City-based Engage Mobile Solutions developed a mobile app assisting pediatricians at Children’s Mercy Hospital, treating children facing acute illnesses and injuries. The tech firm created “CMPeDS: Pediatric Decision Support” to provide healthcare professionals with evidence-based guidelines to manage patients who are facing acute illnesses such as infections, or children who are experiencing acute injuries,…
UMKC eyes ‘final four’ of Enactus contest attracting thousands of student entrepreneurs to KC
Kansas City will soon become the entrepreneurial epicenter for a national, collegiate competition and conference challenging young innovators to do good in their communities. From May 21 to 23, Kansas City will host more than 2,000 entrepreneurial college students for the Enactus United States National Exposition. Founded in 1975, Enactus challenges students from more than…







