Stripe-direct ecommerce in Buena Park.
A custom storefront wired straight into Stripe — your brand, your data, your domain. Built for the entertainment venues, Korean-American businesses, and food makers along the Beach Boulevard corridor.
A custom storefront wired straight into Stripe — your brand, your data, your domain. Built for the entertainment venues, Korean-American businesses, and food makers along the Beach Boulevard corridor.
Buena Park retail runs on places people drive to. A family entertainment venue on the Beach Boulevard corridor with tickets and a gift shop. A Korean-American bakery near Los Coyotes shipping its own mooncakes and gift sets across the country. A food maker turning a restaurant recipe into a jarred sauce people want to take home. The product is a piece of an outing or a taste someone remembers. That memory is the actual reason it sells.
Shopify flattens the memory. The same theme that sells phone cases sells your mooncakes, and the buyer feels the difference whether or not they can name it. For a venue that spends real money on the experience, then routes the gift shop through a generic cart, the platform is the leak. It tells the customer the merch is an afterthought even when it isn't.
Stripe-direct keeps the experience intact through checkout. Stripe moves the money. The layout, the type, the product pages, the cart, the receipt email — written around your business, in your voice, in two languages where the customers read two. You pay Stripe's processing fee and nothing else. No monthly platform rent, no app store, nobody standing between you and a customer who came because they had a good time.
A family entertainment venue on Beach Boulevard. Admission tickets plus a gift-shop line — a plush, a logo hoodie, a souvenir cup. Tickets and goods sit in one checkout, so a parent books Saturday and adds two hoodies in the same screen. Stripe handles the cards. Inventory shows when the youth-medium hoodie is actually gone. Will-call pickup at the gate is one of the fulfillment options, alongside shipping for the out-of-town guests.
A Korean-American bakery near Los Coyotes. A focused line of shippable goods — mooncake gift sets, a tin of cookies, a holiday box people send to family. Product pages run in English and Korean, because the buyers split. Stripe handles the cards and the holiday rush. The look matches the bakery's storefront and packaging exactly, not a theme with a logo on top. We wire it in about three weeks and hand the keys to whoever runs the counter.
A food maker turning a restaurant recipe into retail. Six to eight jarred goods — a sauce, a marinade, a chili paste built from a dish regulars already love. Each page reads like a recipe card: what's in it, what to cook with it. The checkout takes one screen. The receipt sounds like the owner wrote it, because they did. No platform fee chewing on a food-margin business.
This works when the catalog is small enough to design around, the brand carries the sale, and you want the code in your own account. It does not work for a thousand-variant inventory, a full warehouse system, marketplace seller logins, or a stack of twenty Shopify apps. For that, Shopify Plus is the honest answer and I will tell you so before you sign.
The studio is based in San Diego. Buena Park is reachable for an in-person in roughly two hours; most of the build runs remote and works fine that way. The handoff lands on your domain, with your Stripe keys, with the source in a repository you own. One person does the work — that is the point of the price and the speed.
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