Mom’s ‘modern throwback’ dress collection celebrates girlhood, innocence of times past

September 19, 2024  |  Nikki Overfelt Chifalu

Inspired by her five daughters, Joelle Smith created a dress line and online boutique she hopes captures the innocence, beauty, and whimsical spirit of young girls — even though hers are now grown.

Girls in dresses by Simply Sweet; photo by Anna Petrow, courtesy of Simply Sweet

“When they were little girls, I loved watching them put on a dress and just light up and then twirl and play in that dress and how it changes their whole attitude and mood,” the owner of Simply Sweet explained. “I want every little girl to feel really special in these dresses when they put them on — but not only the little girls — the moms that are watching them, too.”

Launched this summer, the Kansas City-based business debuted five styles of dresses — each named after one of Smith’s daughters — in two colorways, with sizes ranging from 3 to 6 months to 6T. Simply Sweet also offers matching hand-crafted floral hair accessories, which Smith originally started making and selling in 2012.

“Girlhood is such a short-lived time,” Smith said. “Let them be little; let them play; and let them twirl and make memories.”

“I feel like we somehow have gotten away from dressing for events,” she added, noting society has gone causal and isn’t dressing like in the past. “I want to bring that back”

Each dress design, she noted, is as unique as the daughter who it’s named after and features her signature ballerina bow.

“They’re not cookie cutter,” she continued. “They’re really sweet and have a lot of character and charm in them with — not only the prints — but also the details; the buttons and the ruffles and little pockets that you don’t see on all the other dresses that are out there.”

“They’re just a modern interpretation of throwback,” she added.

In mid-October — just in time for holiday photos — Smith plans to release a holiday collection, which will feature custom-designed fabrics in classic red and green, as well as pastel pink and green with a whimsical Nutcracker-themed print.

“I struggled to find fabrics that I really liked,” she added. “So going forward, a lot of the fabric that I’m going to be using is going to have my artwork on it, including the holiday collection.”

Simply styled headbands

In 2012, Smith launched Simply Sweet and started making hand-crafted floral hair accessories, marketing them toward newborn photographers.

Joelle Smith, Simply Sweet; photo courtesy of Simply Sweet

“I was a stay-at-home mom with my little ones and just wanted a little supplemental income,” she explained. “So I started an Etsy shop.”

Once moms started to see her headbands in the newborn photo shoots, she continued, the business took off.

“It kind of evolved into a legitimate business — one I wasn’t quite prepared for at the time,” she said. “But I ramped up and I got there.”

Even before the pandemic hit, Smith started to face a little burnout, she admitted, and was struggling to keep up with the demand. So she decided to pare back her offerings and just focus on wholesale orders. The pandemic then forced her to take a break and reimagine the business.

“The dream was always to go into dresses,” she explained, “because many of the headbands — once the moms got word of them — were made to match these really beautiful, boutique-style dresses. I fell in love with many of the brands myself and knew I wanted to create my own someday.”

Matching opportunity with passion

She quit her full-time job at the end of 2022 and started building the business in 2023. It officially launched this summer.

“It’s always been a long-time passion of mine and I’m now getting there to see it come to life,” she added.

Smith said she has big plans to grow the business by adding “momma-match” pieces in 2025 and doing more popups and events.

“It’s really hard to appreciate it when it’s online, but the people who came by our launch party or who have been fit models or have seen them firsthand know the beauty and appreciate the work going into it,” she noted.

As for her daughters — now ages 13 to 30 — who first ignited her passion, Smith shared, they are now cheering her and Simply Sweet on like crazy.

“Even in moments where I start to doubt myself — as you know we all do — and I am out there comparing myself to other brands already,” she explained, “they’re showing me how different I am and how standout I am and why it’s so great. It’s just so awesome to have that support from those young ladies who have inspired it.”

Tagged ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder
      [adinserter block="4"]

      2024 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        E-Scholars rebrands, extending Regnier legacy deeper into influential UMKC accelerator

        By Tommy Felts | September 3, 2025

        E-Scholars — the University of Missouri-Kansas City’s flagship accelerator program — isn’t going anywhere, Alex Matlack shared, but it is getting a rebrand. After listening to feedback from alumni, mentors, and community members, the program formally known as Entrepreneurship Scholars is now the Regnier Venture Accelerator, joining the likes of the Regnier Venture Creation Challenge…

        Plaza-based beauty influencer draws upon her own experience to launch signature brow line

        By Tommy Felts | September 3, 2025

        Bella Jimenez built a real-life following in the local beauty industry, perfecting brows across Kansas City for eight years (four on the Country Club Plaza). But with that influence, she realized, came a responsibility to be authentic and honest about brands — ultimately creating her own line of brow products. “I wanted a professional line from…

        KC Bier Co’s immersive biergarten set to open in Lenexa before thirsty World Cup visitors arrive

        By Tommy Felts | August 30, 2025

        A popular Kansas City brewery officially broke ground Friday on a highly anticipated, border-hopping expansion that will bring one of the nation’s largest authentic Bavarian-style biergartens to Johnson County. “This project has been a long time coming,” said Camille Christie, Vice President of Development and Leasing at West Star Development, which is adding KC Bier…

        LISTEN: Founder on his third startup shares his ‘toilet test’ for culture, talks the lonely eship rollercoaster from Ireland to Topeka

        By Tommy Felts | August 29, 2025

        On this episode of Startland News’ new Plug and Play Topeka founder podcast series, we chat with Barry McDonogh — CEO of Hinalea Imaging — to uncover how cutting-edge hyperspectral imaging is changing the way industries see the world. From food safety and agriculture to pharmaceuticals and defense, Hinalea’s technology reveals the invisible — capturing data…