Family’s Japanese-inspired fabric gift wrap hits a home run with new fans (and an iconic American baseball team)
April 25, 2025 | Taylor Wilmore
At the intersection of heritage and innovation, a Kansas City family business is pitching a new way to gift, through vibrant fabric package wraps that carry both meaning and intention — even catching the attention of an unexpected collaborator: Major League Baseball.
Keiko Furoshiki — a Kansas City brand crafted at the creative fingertips of Japanese-American artist Keiko Kira — blends centuries-old Japanese furoshiki culture with modern sustainability and style.
Its signature product: multipurpose, reusable gift wraps printed with original art designed by Kira.
“We brought these wraps to the U.S. market in a way that’s a little more bright than traditional Japanese or reusable brands,” said Andrea Zoellner, who co-founded Keiko Furoshiki alongside her husband, Tyler Lau, and mother-in-law, Kira.
“Ours are bright and whimsical, a little bit more daring,” she added.
Revenue from those daring designs is popping this spring after Keiko Furoshiki saw online sales for the first quarter of 2025 hit a 200 percent increase over the previous year thanks to residual interest from holiday exposure, Zoellner said.
“People came back or purchased for the first time for Valentine’s Day and Earth Day in greater numbers,” she explained. “We also had a trade show in February that provided a small wholesale bump, and we’re now stocked in five more stores, including in Hawaii and Alaska.”
Click here to shop Keiko Furoshiki online and here to see where the brand is stocked in stores.

Keiko Furoshiki’s custom yukata (a casual, lightweight style of kimono robe) designed for the Chicago Cubs’ MLB season opener in Tokyo; photo courtesy of Keiko Furoshiki
But the biggest financial boost, Zoellner said, has come from corporate gifting and custom furoshiki (a traditional Japanese style of fabric-wrapping gifts or other items in a way that combines function with visual elegance).
Perhaps most notably, Keiko Furoshiki just wrapped a deal with the Chicago Cubs baseball team making custom furoshiki and yukata (a casual, lightweight style of kimono robe) for the MLB season opener in Tokyo in March.
“When the Chicago Cubs reached out to collaborate on a special cross-cultural initiative … we were thrilled to bring their vision to life,” Zoellner said in a blog post detailing the project.
Freelance art director Kirsten Goede joined the trio to design and coordinate the effort, which saw the Cubs’ custom VIP furoshiki gift packages — half sent to Tokyo, half to Chicago — come to life as memorable keepsakes for supporters at home and abroad.
View this post on Instagram
Only 275 limited-edition yukata robes — featuring a bespoke Cubs print and manufactured in Kira’s hometown, Beppu, Japan — were gifted, exclusively to Cubs players, staff, and high-level VIPs.
Click here to read more about the collaboration with the Chicago Cubs.
“The sight of Cubs players donning these yukatas upon their arrival in Tokyo made headlines across the sports world and beyond,” said Zoellner. “This type of attention not only honored the Cubs’ host country but showcased how sports organizations can use design and intentional collaborations to make a meaningful impact on the global stage.”
Collaboration rooted in family
Founded in January 2023, the business was born from a natural combination of skills. Kira, an accomplished fine artist, leads design; Lau, also the founder of Function House, manages manufacturing; Zoellner handles marketing and sales.
“The three of us together, we really kind of hit all of those points: story, tradition, manufacturing, marketing,” Zoellner said.
Zoellner first discovered furoshiki wrapping on Instagram.
“I thought it was beautiful, it was Japanese, and it had this cool print on it,” she said. “It was a really cool project for me.”
Kira’s background includes years teaching at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art and Johnson County Community College. Her fabric designs are inspired by traditional wagara patterns and the natural beauty of Japan’s seasons, which are a personal reflection of her cultural heritage.
Tradition meets sustainability
Used in Japan for centuries to wrap gifts, carry items, and even store clothing, furoshiki is more than decorative, it’s an art form grounded in sustainability.
“They’ve been using fabric for a really, really long time. Part of it is just practicality,” Zoellner said. “This is one of those things that, historically, teaches us about sustainability. They just had to make do, using textiles that already existed, plastic wasn’t invented yet!”
RELATED: The ultimate guide to ordering custom furoshiki: fabric, hemming, and printing explained

Keiko Kira, Keiko Furoshiki, works on a new floral design in her studio; photo courtesy of Keiko Furoshiki
Born in Beppu, Kira moved to the U.S. as a teenager to study fine art, eventually earning her master’s degree in fine arts from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her aesthetic is shaped by Japanese iconography, natural forms, and personal memory.
“The pale pink and lime greens of spring, the blue hydrangeas of the rainy season, the blue of the sea, and the shape of the mountains, they all inspire her palette,” Zoellner said. “She’s very talented.”
Click here to see Kira’s tutorials on how to tie furoshiki.
Each Keiko Furoshiki wrap is crafted from recycled polyester and printed with original artwork. The trio’s debut Garden Collection draws from Kira’s childhood memories and her late mother’s love of flowers.
“Her mother passed away when she was quite young,” Zoellner said. “All these memories of her mother just cultivating these beautiful flowers and having a great appreciation for them. … The first collection is bright, colorful, and hopeful.”
Kansas City-based, community-backed
Though their reach is expanding nationally — and now internationally — Keiko Furoshiki’s heart remains firmly planted in Kansas City: a place Kira found deep support among the city’s growing Asian American creative scene.
“It’s really sweet because Keiko’s new to business, even though she’s in her 60s. Everyone’s like, ‘You’re online?’” Zoellner said. “But the community here has been really amazing.”
Zoellner describes a “network of movers and shakers” helping build momentum through local events, cultural markets, and mutual support among entrepreneurs.
The brand’s mission also aligns with a growing awareness around sustainability. With Americans generating more than 4.6 million pounds of gift wrap annually — much of which ends up in landfills — reusable alternatives are gaining traction.
Click here to follow Keiko Furoshiki on Instagram.
View this post on Instagram

Taylor Wilmore
Taylor Wilmore, hailing from Lee’s Summit, is a dedicated reporter and a recent graduate of the University of Missouri, where she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Journalism. Taylor channels her deep-seated passion for writing and storytelling to create compelling narratives that shed light on the diverse residents of Kansas City.
Prior to her role at Startland News, Taylor made valuable contributions as a reporter for the Columbia Missourian newspaper, where she covered a wide range of community news and higher education stories.
2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kauffman’s new grants go live this week; here’s what we know about the revised funding priorities
The announcement of five new grants opportunities from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation brings months of anticipation and potential uncertainty to a head, offering a more clear view into the relaunched grantmaking strategy of the influential Kansas City philanthropic organization. New applications for funding through the Kauffman Foundation open Aug. 29 — about four months…
Digital Health KC debuts Lumi Awards with star-powered roster of tech honorees
Healthcare is a team sport and Kansas City has all the players, said Dick Flanigan, heaping praise on the region’s innovators at the intersection of healthcare and technology. “We have key entries in every sector, allowing us to tap into these companies and individuals to truly form a winning team,” said Flanigan, president of Digital…
Shoppers lined the block to visit their vintage clothing store; now they’ve curated a new, larger space in KC’s West Bottoms
As brothers Thomas and Reade Rex open the doors to their relocated and expanded vintage clothing store this weekend in Kansas City’s West Bottoms, the event will be a culmination of years of hard work, passion, and a shared vision — plus significant customer support and loyalty, they said. “We’ve always done things together,” said…
World Cup will be KC’s biggest-ever event, top founder says (and local businesses can still get in the game)
When Neal Sharma co-founded DEG at the turn of the millennium, Kansas City felt like it had an inferiority complex, he said. Fast forward to 2024, and the city is teeming with extrinsic validation, he added. The exited founder-turned-civic leader hopes being a World Cup host city in 2026 pushes Kansas City to take a…









