‘Starting to bloom’: Kritiq spring show debuts Sunday highlighting KC fashion scene by design
April 25, 2019 | Chacour Koop
Jo Hartley might be different from the typical designer featured this weekend at The Kritiq Fashion Show.
She’s also the type of creator who organizers of the Kansas City runway experience want to brag about — the type they credit with helping grow the fashion show that’s been organized each fall the past four years. Now The Kritiq is expected to play host to its first spring show 6 p.m. Sunday at the Airline History Museum, Hangar 9, 201 Northwest Lou Holland Drive.
Click here for tickets to Sunday’s show.
Hartley is debuting her line of fashion clothing for adults and children. But this isn’t her first career, or even her second. Hartley retired from the medical field about 15 years ago. Bored without work, she became a photographer specializing in editorial photo shoots. When renting clothing became too expensive, she took matters into her own hands — literally.
Hartley started tailoring her own designs and eventually founded Little Jo Designs out of her Olathe home. This weekend she’ll display a line of Great Gatsby-themed dresses for women and fairy designs for children.
“I love making things,” Hartley said. “I get the idea in my head, and when I’m putting it together I just get so excited when I see the end product.”
Hartley is among 10 designers whose fashion designs will be featured Sunday. The show also will feature Champ System Clothing & Shoe Co.; Naava Swim; From The Bottom Street Apparel; House of Rena, LLC; VVS STAR Clothing CO; Created by Cocoa Butterfly; Steana Monae; OTC Custom Creations; and MADE MOBB.
Click here for photos from The Kritiq’s fall fashion show.
Since 2014, The Kritiq fashion show has continued to grow. Before this spring show, for example, the model casting call drew nearly 600 people, said Mark Launiu, co-founder of MADE and an organizer of The Kritiq. That’s a long way from the first show, which Launiu said “started from us not knowing what we were doing.”
“A lot of entrepreneurs are popping up,” Launiu said. “Everything is starting to bloom on the creative side. As they start to bloom, we start to reach out to them.”
Launiu said the show’s success is driven by entrepreneurs in the city’s creative community — people who’ve always been here but now have somewhere to showcase their work. The key for organizers has been to reflect the city’s culture and be flexible toward designers, not the other way around.
“The runway has allowed them to be authentic to who they are, not so much of having to cater to a certain fashion platform,” Launiu said.
The diversity is evident.
While Hartley’s fashion will reflect a different time and place, Wissal Grass’ designs for her brand OTC Custom Creations will feature bold statements on streetwear. Grass moved to Kansas City from Minnesota about a year ago and first participated in the Kritiq fashion show last fall. That show created connections and networking opportunities, Grass said.
“That’s really awesome, especially being new here in Kansas City,” Grass said.
Kritiq is again partnering with Goodwill of Western Missouri and Eastern Kansas, with a segment of the fashion show devoted to children showcasing clothing from the organization’s area stores.
“For us, it’s being able to team up with people who have their hands in the community,” Launiu said.
So, while Kritiq is a celebration of fashion, it’s also about service, promoting entrepreneurship in the community and keeping creators energized, organizer say.
“What I like to brag about more than anything is the new designers,” Launiu said. “We need more brands on the scene. We need the community to grow.”
This is appealing to first-timers like Hartley, who say a big reason for Kritiq’s success has been its ability to create opportunities for new designers.
“I think for a first fashion show, this is really the one to be in,” Hartley said. “Everyone has gone out of their way to be kind and helpful.”
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
App snaps pics of items to ease moving process, MovinHouz founders say
What started as a couple of bad moving experiences developed into a mobile app to simplify the relocation process, said MovinHouz co-founders. Dominic Klobe and Chris Perrin, co-founders of Olathe-based MovinHouz, a tech startup incubated at Digital Sandbox KC, are building an app that connects moving companies to customers in need of their services, Klobe…
Student investors hope to make inroads with KC founders through pitch day
A group of student investors in the Kansas City University Venture Program are working to jump start deal flow and create relationships with Kansas City entrepreneurs. Launched in 2017, the student-led fund is hosting a pitch event to start a dialogue with area startups in hopes of finding their newest investment deals, said Nate Crosser, a…
NBA hires Alight Analytics to collect, analyze data from fans’ social engagement
The volume of data created within a professional sports team’s fan base is enormous, said Matt Hertig, chief executive officer of Alight Analytics. “Being able to see all of that data together across all of the popular social channels — from Facebook, Youtube, Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat — in one place and really understand the correlation…
Photos: LaunchCode christens KC’s newest techies with graduation celebration
An Afghan immigrant. A mother of six. An English grad turned techie. A man now able to provide for his family. They’re all among the graduates and inspirational stories highlighted during LaunchCode’s graduation ceremony that recognized the newest members of Kansas City’s tech community. LaunchCode on Wednesday graduated 60 students from its rigorous LC101 coding…



