If their shop smells like Travis Kelce at Christmas, these candle chemists called the right play
November 26, 2024 | Joyce Smith
When the owners of Decori home and gift shop at the Village at Briarcliff suited up to create a Travis Kelce candle scent, they turned to their virtual assistant to help make the call.
Alexa suggested a play on the “audacious, confident and powerful” scents of Creed Aventus.
Three formulations later, partners Ralph Liebetrau and Jim Scarpino had the fragrance for TK87 — now one of the most popular scents from their own line of luxury candles, Cefalù, crafted in house by the two Kansas City artisans and retailers.
Click here to check out “Kelce’s biggest fan,” hand-sculpted holiday creation by Jim Scarpino.
The duo started selling the candles a few months ago at Decori, 4169 N. Mulberry Drive, and they’ve recently been “selling like crazy” at Charmed House in the West Bottoms, Scarpino said.
Along with TK87, popular scents include Luxe Hotel, Decori One, and Leather Amberwood (a tweak on Tom Ford’s Fucking Fabulous fragrance).
Cefalù retails for $29 for an 8-ounce candle, $9 for five ounces of wax melt, and $189 for the Cefalù diffuser (comes with 4-ounces of oil).
Click here to follow Decori on Instagram.
Idea passes the burn test
Decori has carried candles from Kansas City-based Trapp for its two decades in operation, adding Tyler candles from Tyler, Texas, four years ago.
Still, Liebetrau and Scarpino dreamed of offering candles unique to their store. In January 2022, they began work on the candle line that eventually would become Cefalù.
A friend who had worked at Trapp introduced them to an international fragrance company based in New Jersey. That company sent them a handful of designer fragrance oils and they began tweaking the scents, making sure they had a “good cold and hot throw.”
“The cold throw is what you smell when you open the jar. The hot throw is what you smell when it is burning,” Liebetrau said. “Then working with different waxes. Not every wick works with every wax. Not every fragrance oil works with every wax. It has to be the right combination of fragrance oil, the wax and the wick.”
They researched wax companies and wick companies, ordered the supplies and set up a candle manufacturing operation in the kitchen of their Northland home.
Each fragrance also needed a “burn test” to make sure it would burn properly all the way to the end of the candle. Creative Printing Co. in Merriam designed the packaging.
Blooming new scents
Liebetrau and Scarpino call their line Cefalù, after the city in northern Sicily from which Scarpino’s family traces its roots.
Cefalù now boasts more than 25 fragrances, including “Tracey Topiary” named for Liebetrau and Scarpino’s first fragrance oil sales representative.
It’s the scent you might get walking into a floral shop cooler, “all those different fragrances of flowers,” Scarpino said.
The duo now manufactures the candles both in their home and store, but they plan to soon move all production to the store.
Other specialty shops in Kansas City and beyond are asking to carry the line, they said, noting they’re considering wholesaling opportunities after the holiday season.
Until then, they’re working to develop new lavender, currant, and fig scented candles to add to Cefalù’s roster.
Startland News contributor Joyce Smith covered local restaurants and retail for nearly 40 years with The Kansas City Star. Click here to follower on X (formerly Twitter), here for Facebook, here for Instagram, and by following #joyceinkc on Threads.

2024 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
$1.6M grant will create incubator for low-income, minority entrepreneurs
A large federal grant will help reanimate an older industrial building in Kansas City to serve as a small business incubator. The U.S. Economic Development Administration recently awarded a $1.6 million grant to the Hispanic Economic Development Corporation of Kansas City, Missouri. The Kansas City organization said that the grant should create about 90 new…
Kauffman report: KC ranks 28 out of 40 in entrepreneurial growth
Fewer Kansas City companies are growing to become medium- or large-sized firms, according to a report released Thursday by the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation. It’s a common story across the U.S., as the nation rebounds from the slump of the Great Recession, the report says. The 2017 Kauffman Index of Growth Entrepreneurship report suggests the…
Housing trends show young professionals don’t care about Troost’s stigma, UC-B says
Lance Carlton initially was skeptical of developing east of Troost Avenue, he said. “But the mentality of the market has changed,” said Carlton, co-managing partner of UC-B Properties, which brought its offices to the 4300 block of Troost in August 2016. The company helped prove an appetite for residential development on the corridor with 19…
Mac Properties plans four-corner food startup village at Armour and Troost
Mac Properties’ Kansas City arm wants to turn a “sleepy intersection” on Troost into a four-corner incubator for thriving residential and restaurant activity. The vision is to create a “food startup village” as the foundation of the development, which would bring 400 new market rate apartments to Armour Boulevard and Troost, said Peter Cassel, director…



