I started West Major seven years ago for selfish reasons. I was tired of soul-sucking corporate jobs, working on projects I didnāt care about. I wanted to work for myself.
The idea to make western shirts didnāt come from market research. I just asked myself: If money werenāt a factor, what would I love to make every day?
To me? Western shirts. And a western brand.
Iāve loved this garment and style my whole life. In my late 20s, I decided - if I was going to do it, now was the time. And I wanted to do it in America, where western wear was born.
I didnāt realize Iād just signed up for one of the hardest missions in apparel - with no money, no connections, and zero experience. Making clothes in the U.S. is already hard. Tees and denim? Doable. But woven shirts? Brutal.
Shirting mills? Gone. Snap button manufacturers? Gone. The skilled single-needle labor needed to make a proper shirt? Almost gone. But the deeper I got, the more obsessed I became. I saw American-made western wear as the underdog and I wanted to fight for it.
Eventually, I found a factory willing to try, and we got started.
My first batch launched on Kickstarter. Most were returned. People loved the shirt - but the arms were too tight. I made improvements and, in 2019, re-shipped a better shirt to those original backers. Then I launched the site, moved back into my momās house to save money, and started bartending at night.
That fall/winter, we sold out of everything - around 300 shirts. I started 2020 with momentum, ready to build the brand Iād dreamed of since high school.
Then COVID hit. Factory shut down. Bar shut down. No job. No inventory. I was a 30-year-old, single guy living in my momās basement trying to start a clothing company. That year taught me how to survive.
The factory reopened that fall, we got shirts made, and sales grew a little.
In 2021, we grew 100% and passed six figures - but lost money. In 2022, we grew another 35% - and still lost money. Everyone told me to give up on American-made.
This path is a manual one. We source every material ourselves, coordinate delivery to the factory. Many things - like pearl snaps and shirting-weight fabric arenāt made here anymore. So we import them, get them through customs, wash the fabric, deliver everything to the sewers. They cut and sew the pieces based off my design and pattern. We pick them up, run our own QC, iron, fold, tag, and bag.
All of this has to be planned months in advance. It takes 3ā6 months to make one shirt. If I want flannels for Q4, I have to start spending money I donāt have in Q1.
Or⦠I could move production overseas and get finished shirts delivered to my door in 30 days, at a fraction of the cost.
But every time I consider it, I lose interest. The energy and excitement behind the brand fades.
At that point, I was bartending four nights a week and pouring everything I had into the business. Constantly out of stock. I could only afford to make 1ā3 shirts at a time to meet factory minimums.
Someone pointed out that my margins werenāt high enough - even if sales doubled, Iād still be underwater.
So in Q1 2023, I made what felt like a last-ditch move: raised prices to $200 and moved manufacturing to a tiny U.S. factory with higher prices, but no minimums.
I figured it was my final shot, and probably wouldnāt work.
But it did.
Revenue grew just 10%, but we released more shirts that year, and turned a small profit. In 2024, sales grew another 40%, and the profit grew too. After 5ā6 years, I finally paid myself enough to quit bartending.
Now in 2025, weāre still growing. We manufacture with both that small factory and our original one again. Weāre in about 14 stores across the U.S. (and one in Italy). All of them have re-ordered. Online sales are up. And weāve pieced together our own supply chain to make it all happen. Itās not perfect. I want to make the highest quality shirt possible - and doing that in America is still very challenging, complicated, and expensive. But weāre getting there.
Thereās another catch.
Recently, I learned from keyboard warriors on X, that to legally claim something is āAmerican-made,ā the FTC requires it to be āall or virtually allā made in the U.S. That means every material - fabric, buttons, snaps, labels - must be sourced domestically.
Most countries are more flexible. Switzerlandās āSwiss Madeā requires 60% local manufacturing costs. France allows it if half the cost is French. Germany and Japan focus on where the core transformation happens. But in the U.S., itās basically all or nothing.
Thatās been a gut punch.
I can literally watch our shirts get made from scratch, by Americans, in America. Washing, cutting, fusing, sewing, pressing, trimming - all of it done here. And many of our materials are from here too. The labels. The interfacing.
But because our fabric or buttons arenāt made here (and canāt be sourced here), weāre not allowed to say āMade in U.S.A.ā I guess?
Iām just trying to make a western shirt in America. Iām not trying to game the system - I just want to be transparent about what weāre doing, and why.
So hereās the moonshot dream:
To build a vertically integrated factory and make a 100% American-made western shirt - fabric, snaps, buttons, labels, and labor - all under one roof. Today, thatās not possible for a small brand like me. So for now, we cut and sew our shirts here, using the best materials we can find, sourcing abroad when we have to.
At the same time, Iām not afraid to use legendary fabrics from overseas mills - some of which have spent generations perfecting their craft. I want to make things here. And I want to make the best stuff possible. I believe we can do both one day. It doesnāt have to be all or nothing.
The brand is still small. I still work seven days a week. No breaks. But nothing has killed us yet. And weāve still got 100,000 more shirts, ideas, and products to build here under the West Major banner before I die.