Wichita couple’s children inspire them to design shoes and start Ten Tiny Toes

Shania Moore, now 2, inspired her parents, Katie Clark and Maurice Moore, to start Ten Tiny Toes.

WICHITA — The shoe business might not seem likely for someone with an IT or health sciences background, but it’s a natural for Katie Clark and her fiance, Maurice Moore.

The birth of their children – Shania is 2 and Victor is six months – inspired them to start Ten Tiny Toes to sell shoes for children.

“We had babies, and we noticed that there’s a lot of issues with shoes,” Clark says.

Shania suffered blisters from her shoes.

“They didn’t fit properly,” Clark says. “She’d always take them off.”

Clark and Moore started designing what they hoped would be better shoes.

“The big thing that was our overall concern was how they fit her.”

Clark, who recently graduated from Wichita State University with a health sciences degree, began contacting pediatric podiatrists and doing research about shoes.

“Well, my background, you do a lot of research,” she says. “That’s what my degree mainly focuses on.”

Ten Tiny Toes is now Clark’s full-time job. The company’s office and warehouse are on the northeast side.

Moore is a Kansas State University graduate and is getting his MBA while working in contracting.

Clark says they’ve been working on children’s shoes for two years.

“They’re better than we imagined you could come up with really,” she says. “Now we’re happy with them so we thought we should start sharing.”

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You don’t say

“The Arkansas River outside doesn’t seem to indicate that.”

Kansas State University history professor James Sherow, speaking at Thursday’s Economic Outlook Conference about whether Wichita Eagle founder Marshall Murdock’s dream to make Wichita an inland port would ever materialize

‘Til We Meet Again to open second custom casket store, this time in Hutchinson

WICHITA — The YouTube video “Death Comes to the Mall” has created more than just curious customers for ‘Til We Meet Again, the custom casket store that opened at Towne West Square in March 2010.

It’s also leading to a second store, this one in Hutchinson, in what owners Nathan Smith and Traci Cone hope will be a franchised chain.

“This whole thing has just taken . . . off and just taken us all by storm,” Smith says.

“I expected us to be open at least two years before we started putting (more) stores in.”

Hutchinson residents James and Robin McComas are two of the more than 120,000 people who have seen one of the videos that customers have made about the unique store.

“We actually drove down to take a look and see what it was,” James McComas says.

Then, Robin McComas’ father died, and her family ordered an urn from ‘Til We Meet Again that was customized to look like her father’s Harley-Davidson.

“It was a wonderful experience in the sense of closure for so many people,” James McComas says.

“Right after that, I kept hounding Nathan. ‘Hey, we’d really like to be partners with you.’ ”

He says the biggest trigger to open the store was when he lost his job as vice president for operations at Promise Regional Medical Center due to restructuring.

“It opened the door to this,” McComas says.

The Hutchinson store will open at 306 N. Main St. on May 19.

“I’m calling mine the Main Street model,” McComas says. “It’s designed for rural America. It’s a little bit different market niche.”

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You don’t say

“I’m a failed parent. Both daughters are at Kansas State University.”

— U.S. Rep. Jerry Moran, a KU grad, speaking to the Wichita Pachyderm Club today

You don’t say

“I’ll say this as gently as I can, but sometimes my genetics takes over, and I get pretty hot about it.”

Dan Thompson, director of Kansas State University’s Beef Cattle Institute, who spoke to the Kansas Livestock Association convention today about the growing threat animal rights activists pose to Kansas ranchers

Hutch’s Stutzmans enters Wichita market

LIFE HOME-NEWPLANTS 7 TB

There’s going to be some new nursery competition in Wichita this spring, summer and fall.

Stutzmans Greenhouse & Garden Center of Hutchinson will have a temporary building at Northwest Centre at 13th and Tyler for most of the year.

“We are seasonal, but yet we take the seasons from spring to fall,” says Ben Miller, who owns the business with his wife, Marlene.

The Millers have owned the business, which opened in Pleasant View in 1956, since 1985. In the past several years, they’ve expanded their retail operation in Hutchinson and opened in Pratt and Salina.

Expanding in Wichita is a possibility, too.

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