A Life Long Journey

I want first off start by saying happy New Year to everybody. Last year in 2025 they were so many ups and downs. It was a bit insane for me, but I knew the only choice I had was to push harder than before, and that’s exactly what I did. Starting the year off in 2026, for the first time ever I am living off of my name Unspoken Visuals. It has taken me over 10 years of pushing hard and resilience, day in and day out to get to this point in my life. And no matter what, I never gave up. And trust me I’ve given up on plenty of things in life, like going to bed on time and eating all my vegetables on my plate for starters.

Here we are over a decade later and it’s my reality. There’s no secret to it. Everyone acts like there’s a secret to making it to this point in life, but the only secret there is, is resilience. I have done everything I could think of, went way beyond my comfort zones, made extremely difficult decisions, overcame mass amounts of obstacles that only movies seem to have, lived in brutally harsh weather conditions in my car, pushed beyond my limits I knew I had, and the hardest of them; watched friends and family disappear out of my life the harder it got for me. And here I am today and a deep rooted part of myself wishes they were here to share these moments with them, but there’s reasons they are no longer in my life as life has a way of weeding itself out.

Hi, I’m Kevin Fuchs and I am the founder of Unspoken Visuals and Lonesome Rambler. Unspoken Visuals started years ago back in my hometown Milwaukee, Wisconsin. I always wanted to share what I saw in life, but never had a way with words as I almost failed English class in high school. But as much as I wish I would have cared as much about pathos, ethos and the other one as I do now, I’d still almost fail. I did however, graduate a trade school for carpentry and despite popular belief, that does not really consist of laying carpet. Yes, I am not lying when I say I have been told, “Oh so that means you lay carpet.” No Chad, I was not laying carpet…

The older I got, the more I distanced myself from the big city life. I wanted it to be quieter so I could see and understand more. Don’t get me wrong, I had my years in the bars and clubs, just ask my buddy Joe all about my birthday dance party at Vitucci‘s, but I grew out of it a lot quicker than most of my old friends did. Soon enough, I packed up my life into my Subaru Forrester, and I moved to Colorado to live with some stranger at the time I had just met a week prior to leaving in Wisconsin that I never knew before. Now, before you say, that was probably dumb to do and not safe, you’re right, but life’s full of adventures and he was a cool dude. Not to mention he was a big help to the start of my life now and I only have him to thank for that. Because let’s be honest, moving to a state you’ve never been to before to live is quite terrifying.

Years later now, I have worked for brands and artists I could only have dreamt of like, Stetson, Scotty McCreery, PRCA and PBR Rodeos, the Fish and Wildlife Foundation and more. I have not just seen beautiful places in the United States, but also been fortunate to have lived in some of the most remote landscapes and breathtaking environments ever. And now, not only do I get to do what I love for the rest of my life, I have my own clothing line called, Lonesome Rambler, that is all my personal designed art and almost all my own personal wardrobe.

On top of that, the experiences have absolutely outweighed the negative times, despite some of my negative times being the absolute worst and hardest times to even comprehend. Things from snowboarding in the Rocky Mountains and skateboarding Venice Beach, photographing grizzly bears face-to-face and watching Moose spar with front row seats, cowboyin’ and ranching, fly fishing in Alpine levels, I can go on and on, but one of the most important; the people I met along the way. The ones that pushed me when I had no push left, the ones that gave me a couch to sleep on so I could stretch out and get a shower, the ones that were there just to be there and hang out. Whether still around or not, every person has gotten me to where I am today.

Life really is what you make it and you absolutely do not have to do what everybody else does or what standards say you have to do, but be ready for a ride, because it’s not easy. Life has its own personal deck of cards for each and every person and you have the free will to decide how you play them. Choose wisely, be strategic, double down, but most importantly, enjoy the game we call, life.