Stripe-direct ecommerce in Garden Grove.
A custom storefront wired straight into Stripe — your brand, your data, your domain. Built for the Korean-American businesses, family retailers, and food makers that fill Garden Grove.
A custom storefront wired straight into Stripe — your brand, your data, your domain. Built for the Korean-American businesses, family retailers, and food makers that fill Garden Grove.
Garden Grove retail is built on family businesses and food. A Korean-American shop near K-Town selling its own banchan and a gochujang it ferments. A Historic Downtown maker turning a market-stall recipe into a packaged good. A retailer in West Garden Grove with fifteen products its regulars already buy weekly. These are operators with a recipe or a reputation that took years to build, selling to a community that knows the difference.
Shopify doesn't know the difference, and it shows. The same theme that sells phone accessories sells your fermented goods, with the same header and the same cart. For a Garden Grove family business, the platform quietly says this is just another store, which is precisely what it isn't. The leak is in the platform, not the product.
Stripe-direct holds the difference on screen. Stripe moves the money. The layout, the type, the product pages, the cart, the receipt — all written around your shop, in your voice, in English and Korean where the buyers read both. You pay Stripe's processing fee and nothing else. No monthly platform rent, no app store, nobody between you and a customer who has shopped with your family for years.
A Korean-American banchan and condiment maker near K-Town. A dozen goods — a gochujang it ferments, kimchi by the jar, a gift set people send to family. The product pages run in English and Korean. Stripe handles the cards and keeps the cold-chain shipping notes straight. Inventory shows when the family-size kimchi is actually out. In-store pickup is an option, since plenty of regulars prefer it fresh off the counter.
A Historic Downtown food maker. A short line built from a market-stall recipe — a sauce, a marinade, a spice blend now jarred for shelves. Each page reads like a recipe card: what's in it, what to cook. The look matches the stall's signage 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 West Garden Grove family retailer. Fifteen products the regulars already buy, online for the first time. The pages read plainly, load fast on a phone, and the checkout takes one screen. The receipt and shipping note sound like the owner, because that's who wrote them. No platform fee chewing into margins that are already thin.
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. Garden Grove 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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