‘Younger eyes’ at Street Wearhouse see opportunity to win through the screen as digital personality meets quality printing

July 26, 2023  |  Matthew Gwin

The owners of a recently-opened print studio hope to make an imprint on the industry by taking a different approach to garment design and production, they said.

Street Wearhouse, co-founded by Alex Trinkle and Tyler Love, specializes in printing and embroidering T-shirts, hats, and other apparel from its North Kansas City production facility.

Alex Trinkle, Street Wearhouse; photo by Matthew Gwin, Startland News

Trinkle, who previously created the guerrilla streetwear brand Clever Fools, said that Street Wearhouse takes a more artistic and “outside the box” approach to its screen printed designs in comparison to other print shops.

“The majority of print shop owners are not focused on the art aspect of printing,” Trinkle said. “There are more artsy print shops for sure. But, in terms of bringing in the quality and attention to details, and making a print more vibrant, I feel like our younger eyes can give a new perspective to our customers.”

As business owners under 30, the duo places high importance on maintaining a quality digital presence, Love added.

Alex Trinkle, Street Wearhouse; photo by Matthew Gwin, Startland News

“Even just having pictures on our website, that’s a separator from a lot of print shops,” Love said. “[Trinkle] handles all our social media, and a lot of print shops don’t do that. They don’t market themselves. … [Trinkle] has a personality that transfers through the screen, and that energy goes to the customers.”

Additionally, Street Wearhouse prioritizes quality over quantity, Love said, and chooses to focus on quicker turnaround times as opposed to lower prices.

“We’re not going to be racing to the bottom competing on price,” Love said. “We’re going to be competing with quality and beating out other shops’ turnaround times. … We aim for five to seven business days without sacrificing quality.”

“A lot of shops try to win on pricing,” Love added. “We’re not trying to compete there, but we might win customers over because they can trust us; because they see the faces printing.”

Alex Trinkle and Tyler Love, Street Wearhouse; photo by Matthew Gwin, Startland News

Relationship ships

Trinkle and Love’s relationship predates Street Wearhouse; the two were high school classmates — though not close friends — growing up in Overland Park.

They reconnected when Love placed an order from Clever Fools that never shipped, he recalled, leading him to message Trinkle directly.

The shipping snafu turned out to be serendipitous, as each of them provided a skill in an area that the other was lacking: Trinkle had the screen printing chops and the platform, while Love had the embroidery and direct-to-garment (DTG) skills and machinery.

“[Love] was doing DTG, and I needed somebody to make samples for me because when I would do pre-order drops, I wouldn’t have everything printed,” Trinkle recalled. “I saw an opportunity in him.”

Love originally picked up embroidery — and eventually, direct-to-garment — in 2019 after leaving an accounting job at Burns & McDonnell, he shared.

“It was draining mentally because it was the same stuff every single day, but I would have never found [embroidery] if I didn’t take that job,” Love said.

He started his own company called Loves Branding, graduating from his first sewing machine to a semi-commercial machine as his contracts picked up — all while learning embroidery techniques online.

“During that time, I would spend a lot of time watching YouTube videos, and I subscribed to the University of YouTube 100 percent,” Love said. “You can learn almost anything on there.”

Eventually, Love “dipped into” direct-to-garment, a vertical which he said Street Wearhouse doesn’t use all that much. That skill set, however, helped lead to his connection with Trinkle, he acknowledged.

“I learned a lot,” Love said. “I met a lot of people, [Trinkle] being one of them who I’ve been able to build that partnership with.”

Alex Trinkle, Street Wearhouse; photo by Matthew Gwin, Startland News

Scaling into new challenges

Since opening in January, Street Wearhouse has already seen consistent growth and is poised for more, according to Trinkle.

Street Wearhouse

“We are growing so rapidly,” he said. “The bigger we are, the bigger problems we’ll face, so we have to be mentally ready for that. We’re going to have to learn through that process, which I’m nervous about, but at the same time, super excited about.”

The first items on the growth to-do list include adding a second automatic screen printing setup, expanding to a six-head embroidery machine, and streamlining the back-end processes, Love said.

“If we can build these processes and workflows out where they work for us at this scale, then the processes themselves will scale with us,” Love said. “ We’re not overextending, but we’re allowing ourselves to take fairly decent strides in, hopefully, the correct direction.”

As they scale Street Wearhouse, Love and Trinkle plan to bring on more employees, knowing they can still rely on one another for support and perspective.

“I think a business relationship is kind of like [the poem “Footprints”],” Trinkle said. “If one person falls, you have a friend to lift you back up, but if you do it by yourself, there’s nobody else to lift you back up.”

Tyler Love and Alex Trinkle, Street Wearhouse; photos by Matthew Gwin, Startland News

Love echoed those sentiments, highlighting how the two find common ground when their visions aren’t exactly aligned.

“Even when we bump heads and have disagreements, we always figure it out, and it ends up being the better answer,” he said. “If we never disagreed, that wouldn’t be a good business relationship at all.”

Love and Trinkle are in agreement, though, that Street Wearhouse is just getting started.

“It’s been a fun journey,” Love said, “and the road’s not going to end soon.”

Tagged , , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2023 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Claimkit snags ‘aspirational entrepreneur’ award

        By Tommy Felts | May 15, 2015

        Overland Park-based tech startup ClaimKit recently was dubbed 2015’s most “aspirational entrepreneur” by the Greater Kansas City Chamber of Commerce. Founded in 2011, Claimkit created a contract management platform for insurance companies, law firms and consulting groups to help them more efficiently collect and analyze documents. Now with five full time staff, the company in…

        C2FO CEO Sandy Kemper talks failure, VCs, maximizing time

        By Tommy Felts | May 14, 2015

        From a Kansas City arena to the founders of one of the nation’s largest financial institutions, the Kemper name is well known in Kansas City. But it’s more than just Sandy Kemper’s name that drew a sold out crowd at Kansas City’s May Startup Grind event. Kemper leads one of Kansas City’s fastest growing companies…

        Think hiring: Employees vs. contractors

        By Tommy Felts | May 14, 2015

        In this Think column, Venture Legal founder Chris Brown explores the dynamics a growing company faces when it needs to hire an extra set of hands. The Think column helps entrepreneurs to stop and think about the various aspects of starting and running a business. Read ThinkViral President Anne Cull’s introduction to the series here.  You’ve started a company, closed…

        Tech startup, KCSV among finalists for small biz awards

        By Tommy Felts | May 14, 2015

        The Kansas City Kansas Chamber of Commerce announced Thursday its small business award finalists. The awards celebrate businesses that are financially successful, have a dynamic idea and are making an impact on the community. This year’s finalists include two members of the startup community. RFP365, which created software that eases the request for proposal process,…