Loud is in season: How one designer plans to yell their angrily sewn message during KC Fashion Week
March 2, 2023 | Channa Steinmetz
Dustin Loveland channeled love — and anger — into a debut spring and summer collection that premieres soon at Kansas City Fashion Week 2023.
“I’ve had to deal with a lot of anger from the past couple of years for a variety of reasons,” said Loveland, a non-binary freelance designer and sewer in Kansas City. “Therapy is expensive, so I turned to non-fiction books about managing anger and the concept of anger. People may not immediately understand that this collection is about anger because I wanted there to be this mystical element — but it really is about anger, gratitude and love.”
“Wall Yeller” is an eight-look spring and summer collection set to debut Wednesday, March 8 at Union Station during Kansas City Fashion Week’s evening runway show. The collection is dedicated to those who are surviving in unwelcoming industries and communities, and are contributing to make it better for others like them in the future, Loveland explained.
Click here to buy tickets to Dustin Loveland’s show at Kansas City Fashion Week.

Dustin Loveland works on a piece for their “Wall Yeller” collection, which is set to debut at KC Fashion Week
The title of the collection “Wall Yeller” comes from the popular reality show “Big Brother” where fans would get close enough to the house where the show is filmed and yell over the outside wall so that contestants could hear them.
“These ‘wall yellers’ do it for two reasons: either they really love and support one of the house guests, so they warn them about another person in the house; or they are mad at someone in the house and are yelling at them,” Loveland said, laughing. “I like to think of this term more symbolically. Either you’re yelling at the wall to get out that anger, or you’re yelling out of love to warn someone in a system. I’m hoping we are all ‘wall yellers’ in a way of trying to circumvent systems.”
“Wall Yeller” is Loveland’s second fashion collection, with their first collection being an all-spandex line in 2019. Loveland was introduced to Kansas City Fashion Week through their mentor, Joshua Christensen — a Kansas City-based fashion designer who competed on season nine of “Project Runway.”
“He’s part of the Kansas City Fashion Week team, and he really encouraged me to get involved with it,” Loveland said. “I’ve had this lingering anxious energy, but I am actually very excited to share this collection.”
Click here to learn more about Kansas City Fashion Week.
Video games and galaxies
Growing up in Kirksville, Missouri, Loveland enjoyed playing video games with their sister, they recalled, noting that the experience has now inspired their work.
“I was during my thesis for my undergrad, trying to figure out where my general aesthetic comes from,” said Loveland, who graduated from the Kansas City Art Institute in 2014. “I was realizing that it came from video games, and there were a lot of video games involved in my childhood. It’s funny because my sister was doing her thesis at the same time — and we hadn’t discussed our theses together — and she also wrote about video games.”
Throughout Loveland’s career, they have looked inward for inspiration, they said, noting that the designs and symbolism in “Wall Yeller” are pulled from personal interest.
“The motifs throughout the collection are all natural tools that we use to tell time — but through combustion, like stars or the sun or candles or incense,” Loveland said. “I learned how to make incense for meditation and help deal with my anger. There is this history of incense, where you can make it so the first half is a scent like sandalwood and then the second half is lavender. It’s a method of telling time because when you smell the lavender, you know it’s time to cool down from your practice. … I’ve also included a lot of swirly stars, spirals and twin flames. It gives the collection that mystical feel.”

Dustin Loveland works on a piece for their “Wall Yeller” collection, which is set to debut at KC Fashion Week
Queer fashion in the Midwest
Loveland’s hope for their premier at Kansas City Fashion Week is that their collection motivates the community to want to see more inclusive and unique ideas when it comes to fashion, Loveland said.
“There’s been this boom of creativity with lingerie, but I haven’t seen it done a lot with men’s or genderless, non-binary underwear,” Loveland noted. “I want to put my foothold into that because I think there can be a lot there.”
“… I’ve never been or participated in KC Fashion Week before, but what I’ve gathered from other designers is that it highlights a lot of bridal, drapery and women’s wear,” they continued. “I love women’s wear. But I’m excited to show my work because it’s all men/non-binary people. It’s sporty and chill. It’s a very different perspective than what’s already been out there, and I think would bring a new audience to this platform who haven’t been there before.”
As someone who has been a part of both Kansas City’s art community and its fashion world, Loveland views access to capital as one of the biggest differences between the two spaces, they said.
“There’s a lot of capital for visual artists here in KC, but there’s not a whole lot of capital — from my perspective — for fashion designers,” Loveland said. “More and more fashion shows and events are happening each year, so there’s definitely a demand for them. But for an emerging fashion designer, doing runway after runway is not a sustainable business practice, because there’s designer fees, fabric costs, hours on top of another job. It’s a lot.”
Queer fashion in the Midwest differs from such fashion on the coasts, Loveland noted, and they are aiming to one day have a studio that highlights and celebrates queer design in the Midwest.
“I don’t have the goal of globalizing a fashion design studio because I don’t want to contribute to more stuff, whether that’s waste or what have you,” Loveland said. “I would love to have a financially sustainable design practice here in Kansas City with some employees. That is what I’m working toward.”
Featured Business

2023 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
The WTF Series: Gift shopping for the ‘smart home’
On a daily basis, Ben Kittrell translates the jargon-filled world of technology for clients of his tech consultancy. The Words that Frustrate (WTF) series aims to offer readers some clarity in an industry dominated by techies’ confusing argot. With Christmas right around the corner, you may be looking for that techie, geeky person in…
Changes here and on the horizon for Startland
You don’t have to be a fan of 1970s rock legend David Bowie for these Changes. Startland News is in the midst of an evolution to better serve readers and to maximize its impact in Kansas City. A number of changes have already taken place, and many more are on the horizon. We’re a startup,…
Social reaction: Kansas City discusses whether it’s ‘too nice’
Is Kansas City too nice? That question recently provoked a lively discussion amongst the Kansas City entrepreneurial community, eliciting thoughtful responses on the merits and disadvantages of the area’s candor. Startland News compiled some of those comments below that we found on our website in what will mark a new focus that aims to stimulate…
Kansas City to play tech teacher again with gigabit conference
Kansas City’s years of experience with gigabit will once again allow it to play Internet instructor. Thanks to popular demand, non-profit organization KC Digital Drive announced that it will host the second-annual Gigabit City Summit May 16 – 18. The summit will welcome dozens of cities to learn from Kansas City’s experience with gigabit Internet…

