Allyson and Chris Smith live in Carmel, Indiana, with their three daughters. Their youngest, Julian Belle, was born on April 15, 2021, joining older sisters Hadley Kay and Lennon Jane.
Here, we talk to Allyson about how she and Chris chose the name Julian Belle for their little girl.
I started watching The Resident, where Jenna Dewan’s character is named Julian. She’s a really strong medical device rep, and I loved hearing people say her name, Julian Booth. I would always think, “that’s such a cool name.”
Soon after that, I saw an article that was posted on Nameberry all about the name Julian. I started reading about the historical figure Julian of Norwich, who wrote the first-known English book by a woman. I read a lot, so it felt like a sign to read more about this historical figure — a woman! — named Julian.
Around that time, my husband and I started thinking Julian could work for a girl. We still weren’t 100% — we were always tossing around other name ideas. But we compared everything to Julian.
The other girls have one-syllable middle names, Kay and Jane, so Belle just checked all those boxes. And being so feminine, I liked it with Julian, a traditional boy name.
I didn’t realize it until after Julian was born, but Hadley, Lennon, and Julian all have six letters. My mom just got a tattoo of all of their names on her arm. She told me they look so good together because they all have six letters.
That was another thing I liked about Julian. I was wondering what the nickname would be for a boy. Julie and Jules are pretty feminine nicknames, which would be okay, but made me hesitate. It made it even more perfect for a girl. I do call her Jules a lot — it’s such a natural nickname. Both of the girls call her Jules most of the time.
I tried not to spend too much time thinking about nicknames. I did that with the older two, and nobody calls them by the nicknames I anticipated. I thought everyone was going to call Lennon “Lenny,” which I didn’t love, but nobody does. We call my oldest Hads as a nickname, which never occurred to me when we named her Hadley. It just naturally came out!
By the time we got to the delivery room, Julian was the only option. I just hadn’t fully committed to it yet. I hadn’t told anyone — I didn’t want anyone’s opinion. I just know how that can be. Even if they’re trying to be nice and saying that they like it, there’s always that person who says, “Ohhhh…, interesting.”
Overall, people really liked it. I have a lot of friends with similar style, who have kids with gender-neutral names. Everyone on that bandwagon really loved it. They thought Julian was just a great name for a girl.
We got lucky with our oldest. Kay is both my mom’s middle name, and Chris’s mom’s middle name. Both of their grandmas have the middle name Kay, so it was no question when we named Hadley. And Hadley Kay just flows perfectly. Lennon has my middle name, Jane, which came from my grandma. I wanted something equally as special for Julian’s middle name.
We were able to tell my father-in-law that we were going to name a boy Julian Edward, and he felt good about that. It was kind of like a consolation prize, I guess.
I just love to see what our friends come up with. I didn’t worry about it with Julian, because I would have been surprised if someone else named their daughter Julian, but with the others I worried that one of my friends would have a child and use one of my names. Luckily that never happened!
Now that we have all three of ours named — and we’re not going to have any more — I feel really happy when I hear other babies that have their names. If they did get the name from us, I’m really flattered, and if they didn’t, I just think it’s fun. I would love to come across another little girl named Julian. I haven’t yet, but I hope someday I will!
That’s a lesson for people that are feeling hesitant — you may not be 100% in love with it until your baby arrives. You can take a risk, and it’s pretty unlikely that you would feel regret over a name choice because once it’s your baby’s name, it’s hard not to love it.
Thank you so much, Allyson!
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Sophie Kihm has been writing for Nameberry since 2015. She has contributed stories on the top 2020s names, Gen Z names, and cottagecore baby names. Sophie is Nameberry’s resident Name Guru to the Stars, where she suggests names for celebrity babies. She also manages the Nameberry Instagram and Pinterest.
Sophie Kihm's articles on names have run on People, Today, The Huffington Post, and more. She has been quoted as a name expert by The Washington Post, People, The Huffington Post, and more. You can follow her personally on Instagram or Pinterest, or contact her at [email protected]. Sophie lives in Chicago.
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