In 1890, Smith sailed for Paris to study painting at the
Académie Julian in
Paris as she was prevented from attending
École des Beaux-Arts because she was female. At the Academie, her work was critiqued by prominent French artists
William Bouguereau and
Tony Robert-Fleury. Smith
exhibited her work at
the Woman's Building at the 1893
World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. During the summers of 1901 and 1902, she enrolled in George
Hitchcock's summer school in Egmond, the Netherlands. Her famous paintings, "A Daughter of Egmond" and "The First Birthday" were the result of this period of artistic study. Both paintings were placed on long-term loan to the
Detroit Institute of Arts who wrote the following about The First Birthday in a 1907 publication: the color is strikingly portrayed. The variegated notes in the red crib, the greens in sunlight and shadow, the dull tones of the matron's dress and the dull red of the tile and brick of the house, all combine to form one general tone with which no single note conflicts. Her Detroit artistic pursuits included studying with other prominent Detroit artist,
Julius Rolshoven. During a 1910 exhibition at the Detroit Museum of Art, the following was carried in the papers, "it has been conceded that Miss Letta Crapo-Smith's work stands out for beauty, strength and originality....Miss Smith's Rose Garden, with the girl bending over the flowers, is full of charm." Smith became president of the Detroit Society of Women Painters in 1907 and served in that capacity until 1915, when she became too ill to continue. ==Death==