Shirt company takes its dudes seriously
- Share via
Andrew Edwards
A new T-shirt company tucked inside a Balboa Peninsula apartment is
looking to make some sweet waves in the industry.
Beachdude, Inc. is the brainchild of K.C. Heylin, a former
carpenter whose old business also used the Beachdude, Inc. moniker.
But in the past year, he switched from wood to cotton. The transition
got off to a rough start.
Over the last summer, Heylin, 46, said he spent about $4,600
designing a line of surf-inspired casual apparel. The only problem
was that upon finishing, he didn’t like what he saw.
“I looked at it, and I kind of had the feeling that I’d been
punched in the gut, because I wasn’t feeling it,” Heylin said.
His dissatisfaction prompted him to redesign his products, which
he finished in November. Heylin’s gear is based upon three simple
designs: a yellow, nameless tiki man; the letters “BDI” in a spade
shape; and Beachdude Inc.’s spiky logo superimposed over a surfboard.
Heylin also has a design of baby clothes bearing the image of a tiki
man juggling baby bottles.
“It feels gratifying to see it come together,” Heylin said.
Beachdude Inc. has only one employee, 19-year-old surfer Ryan
Garvin, whom Heylin recruited from Saddleback Church in Lake Forest.
Heylin called himself the company’s “Young Dude,” and Heylin’s
business cards list his title as the “Main Dude.”
The pair are trying to promote their clothes at local surf shops,
and on Friday, Heylin hopped a plane to Hawaii, where he hopes to
convince stores on the islands to carry his products. Though
Beachdude Inc.’s inventory is confined to Heylin’s garage and another
in Huntington Beach, the company is online, and the Internet makes it
possible for the pair to sell their clothes on the other side of the
Pacific, Garvin said.
“I don’t know why, but the Japanese like it,” Garvin said.
Heylin and Garvin want to market their duds as a hip product but
also want to keep a clean image. hey’re both Christians, Garvin said,
so they won’t resort to racy promotions a la the Abercrombie and
Fitch catalog to market their clothes. They want the beach image to
sell.
“We want people to look at it and think, it’s cool, I want to buy
it,” Garvin said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.