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Nothing beats a well-made pinafore for summer, and Stitchy McYarnpants' kitschy sensibility makes this version a winner:

Love the modern snaps and snowflake design at the bottom, plus the sweet detail at the hem. Part smock, part romper, part Sunday best.


Beautiful, aren't they?

We got these for the Bean's birthday. She is--as are all babies, I'm sure--such a tactile creature, and these stacking bowls are made of smooth, honeyed wood that feels wonderful to the touch. A toy like this will just last and last, and I like the idea that these can be pasta bowls in pretend play when she's four or five.

Natural, non toxic, open ended, simple. Perfect.

We've been looking for a table for the Bean, and there are options a-plenty, smart designs from eco-savvy lines, round versions with chalkboard tops, foamy sets that look like they could take a beating, and then we found The Land of Nod's Kid's Adjustable Activity Table . . .


Which starts at the floor level here and adjusts two more times to this

And a desk, which is a long ways off, granted, but fun to think about. So this is the table we're getting, with the scroll option and without the bins (which are clever additions, but seem sort of useless beyond the at-the-floor stage). Eventually we'll add chairs in yellow. Isn't it perfect?

I'm having a bohemian year, and the Bean's along for the ride.


This absurdly cute ringer from bellaserababy is so flower child your baby will bring peace and love to everyone she meets when she's wearing it. Love the bib-as-fashion look, as well as the fact that these are roomy and airy and great for playing. Check out the clever button headband.

This is another great find at Etsy--all of the designs are exuberant, wearable and just plain fun.

I have inadvertently found the best sunblock and here it is, in all of its humble glory:





This mighty 4 oz. tub of Earth's Best Baby Care Chemical Free Sunblock SPF 30 brought to you by JASON Natural Products is going to get us through the mildish Sarasota spring and even--possibly, fingers crossed--June. I picked this potent little bottle up one day at the grocery store in the organic baby products aisle. With 70% organic ingredients, Earth's Best was compelling. I know next to nothing about sunblock for babies and kids, but, having a vague misapprehension about the big brand pink bottles with their baby bottoms and splashy claims, I had been on the lookout for something more in line with the Earth Mama/California Baby products we like so much. I didn't check Cosmetics Database or consult with Safe Mama first, however, just went it alone, with only my own developing product consciousness to guide me.

Turns out, this grasshopper did well. After another round at the beach yesterday--this time hotter and a half hour earlier than last time--I am marveling at the Bean's perfectly preserved skin. I decided to look up the sunblock last night and am now semi-well versed in the language of sunscreen. Earth's Best is great because it's essentially comprised of zinc and titanium dioxide (which has recently received a bit of negative press but is by all accounts only potentially problematic in its micronized--read: nano-ized--form), two naturally occuring minerals. It's truly topical, sitting on the skin rather than absorbing in, which means you get that thick, white coating that leaves a cast. Never before have I been so glad to have a sunblock that leaves such traces of itself--I certainly get the sense that I'm providing a barrier between the sun and the Bean's gorgeous skin. Oh, and it's paraben-free too.






Okay, as an enormous and longtime fan of U2 and of Prokofiev's Peter and the Wolf, I owned this version long before I had the Bean. And I listened to it, along with the poetry CDs whose existence at all now seems inspired by the very idea that a child might listen to them (Dylan Thomas' warbling tenor is a sensory experience unto itself). But Prokofiev's master work is a children's tale, and while I thought it beautifully executed before, playing it for the Bean shows me how important it is to listen to it with a wee one. Bono conceived this version with his daughters Jordan and Eve and, of course, with pal Gavin Friday of Virgin Prunes fame. It's Friday who narrates the tale. I have listened to the soundtrack without the book and vice versa. Both ways are great; Bono's drawings emphasize how modern the story actually is, how elegant the sensibility of it.

There are lots of inventive ways to live green. Here's another:


For the nurseries of tomorrow, digital murals will be what paste-it decals and graphics are today. A mural like this one from Graham & Brown makes me want to wrap the Bean's room in wall to wall woodland.


The Bean's first birthday is rapidly approaching, and last weekend I ordered invites, flags and a party hat from Gaddie & Tood, (here's an example of a basic Google search proving successful). I was hoping to find invites that were sweet, with a vintage sensibility and not too pricey. Score.
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Gaddie & Tood's gorgeous images are sugared with glitter but otherwise simple and unfettered. Match the image you like (woodland creatures, elephant, buggy, plane, strawberry, cupcake, circus tent, etc.) with one of four notecard shapes, or put it on a gift tag or flag. They've also got felt flags and the aforementioned party hats and garlands and bags . . .



Hello gorgeous.


This kimono jacket by melimade shows off creator Meli's expert craftsmanship and keen eye for pattern. At last year's Atomic Holiday Bazaar here in Sarasota, the Bean made out like a bandit at melimade's booth: organic wool red pepper teether, organic cuddly, one bright pinafore, a reversible dress, roomy pj-esque pants . . . Meli's thought of everything a crafty kid might need.


Here's another project I'm putting on the list: book page decoupage in the Bean's bathroom. There's a fabulous example of this dork chic look in the latest Cookie--alas, I couldn't find an image of it online, but you'll find it in the book units for kids piece (one accent wall is papered in Olivia's graphic elegance). Here's another witty take over at Apartment Therapy, which references DIY Magazine. And of course there's always has-run Anthropologie catalogues for inspiration.

As a first lit kid entry, this is a bit of cheating on my part, but books are also such lovely things to look at that it's hard not to fall for this crafty way of enshrining them.

Found this birthday pennant.



We love fair trade company Yellow Label Kids for lots of reasons, but mostly because everything is handmade -- many items by mothers who also happen to be skilled artisans.

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