Boutique startup specializing in breast prosthesis for cancer survivors catches attention of KC healthcare investor
November 24, 2020 | Channa Steinmetz
As the new year rang in 2020, Jasmine Jones envisioned pop-up shops for Cherry Blossom Intimates — an accredited medical facility housed within a lingerie boutique that provides breast cancer survivors with customizable prosthesis.
Eleven months into the unpredictable year, however, Jones innovated the startup into a virtual brand.
“I had to ask myself, ‘What would I do if I could never touch a patient again?’” shared Jones, who co-founded Cherry Blossom Intimates in Glenarden, Maryland, with Dr. Regina Hampton.
“We tested virtual fittings during COVID, and that proved to work,” Jones noted. “That grew us to a national — and soon international — reach.”
Click here to learn more about Cherry Blossom Intimates.
Cherry Blossom Intimates made its mark in Kansas City this summer when the startup was accepted into the virtual Techstars Kansas City 2020 accelerator class. The biggest takeaway from the accelerator for Jones was the “Mentor Madness” program, she said.
“It’s where you connect with around 90 different mentors for 20 minutes apiece over the course of three weeks,” she explained. “So imagine telling 90 CEOs, chief marketing officers or chief technology officers about your business back-to-back, and then having them ask drilling questions, as well as offer advice or critiques. After that, I knew I could survive anything.”
Techstars also introduced Jones to Tammy Ham, the president of BioNovus Innovations — a Kansas City venture capital and private equity firm that specializes in healthcare innovations.
Click here for a list of the other nine startups in the Techstars Kansas City 2020 accelerator.
BioNovus — along with Anna Mason (a partner at Revolution’s Rise of the Rest Seed Fund); Lesa Mitchell, managing director for Techstars Kansas City; SoGal Ventures; Davyeon Ross and Bread & Butter Ventures — contributed $2 million to fund the virtual version of Cherry Blossom Intimates.
Watch Jasmine Jones’ pitch during Techstars Kansas City’s 2020 demo day, then keep reading.
The COVID-friendly adaptation of the startup is planned as a smartphone app that will scan a user’s body for measurements, and then provide breast prosthesis through a prescription. It also is expected to include educational and community resources surrounding breast cancer, Jones noted.
“We will be able to fit our patients from the comfort of their home, which is really exciting,” Jones shared. “And then we have some other rollouts that will help us to bring community to women with breast cancer who are experiencing this challenging time in their lives, or who have experienced it, or who are looking for preventative methods and education about breast cancer.”
Ham noted Cherry Blossom Intimates’ ability to pivot and innovate during the pandemic impressed BioNovus.
“We believe it’s important to invest in innovative organizations — that’s part of the reason that [BioNovus] invested in Cherry Blossom Intimates,” Ham said. “They have this novel approach to breast prosthesis for an underserved population.”
Along with BioNovus-as-a-company’s interest in Cherry Blossom Intimates, Ham — who is a breast cancer survivor — said her personal connection to breast cancer gives her an understanding of the great need for such a venture.
“Cancer in general is an absolutely devastating disease,” Ham shared. “Breast cancer in particular can be devastating — not only physically but it can have an impact emotionally on women who look in the mirror after going through a mastectomy.”
Under the Cherry Blossoms
Jones’ passion for Cherry Blossom Intimates comes from her grandmother, who passed from breast cancer when Jones was in college.
“When she was still alive, I remember her shopping with her for post-mastectomy bras and prosthetics — it was always really crummy,” Jones recalled. “She had to shop inside of a medical supply store behind aisles of adult diapers, laxatives and bedpans. She was also a pretty brown woman, and the prosthetics were this beige-pink color that didn’t match her skin.
“It made no sense to me that my grandma had to shop there, but my sister and I could shop inside of Victoria’s Secret and these beautiful shops,” she continued. “I remember wondering why it is that women who have survived breast cancer and moved on with their life, still had to go to these medical places for the experience of being fit for a bra.”
Even as a young child, Jones knew something had to be done, she said. Years after her grandmother died, Jones met Dr. Hampton underneath the cherry blossom trees at the Tidal Basin in Washington D.C.
In October 2018, the two women launched Cherry Blossom Intimates — soon to be rebranded as “Myya.”
“That’s really inspired by Maya Angelou’s quote that says, ‘The goal is mainly not to survive but thrive,’” Jones noted. “That is my main ethos. I don’t want women to solely think about survivorship, I want them to think about completely thriving after cancer.”
Unlike Jones’ grandmother’s experience, Cherry Blossom Intimates provides its customers with the ability to fully customize their breast prosthetics including: skin tone, nipple size, freckles and veins.
Shop Cherry Blossom Intimates’ products here.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Early childhood isn’t a money maker, but can be a money breaker: ECJC initiative links lack of child care to business’ bottom lines
Access to safe and affordable child care is an issue that should concern everyone, Judy Bumpus acknowledged. Research indicates the current capacity to provide child care within the Kansas City metro is only 45 percent, according to the director of client services for the Kansas City Women’s Business Center, with 80,000 children still needing childcare…
KC Black Owned’s fall summit returns this weekend with corporate backing, tools for Black entrepreneurs
A summit planned for Saturday at the Kansas City Convention Center aims to inspire Black business owners and equip them with the resources, strategies, and connections needed to thrive in today’s competitive marketplace. The Global Strategies Summit for Market Innovators — organized by KC Black Owned — is deeply rooted in its founder’s drive to…
This Midtown pizza shop sliced through challenges, topping years of popup work with grand opening
Orange By: Devoured — the flagship pizza shop from Jhy Coulter — is finally ready for the public, she said, after enduring years of pop-ups to keep the dream alive, renovations, and the closure of business lending platform Mainvest that took founders by surprise. “I am tired — I’m exhausted,” Coulter said with a laugh,…
Exited founders: Face the tough conversations first; avoid a messy post-honeymoon breakup
Preparing for an exit begins with co-founder alignment at the startup’s launch, three veteran Kansas City founders agreed. “You are getting married to your founders,” explained Tony Caudill, who co-founded two tech startups with his best friend — including aware3, which was acquired in 2018 by Nelnet. “Just like when you find your mate of…


