398UNr Last a few years has been to Ibiza, so met a person there whose style of presentation is very similar to yours. But, unfortunately, that person is too far from the Internet...
Posted at 5:01PM on September 6th 2011 by kaufen Generika Cialis
I am with Carol. There is nothing wrong with most of these costumes.
My four year old asked to be a pink ballerina robot!
I think it's sad that most kids have cheap, store-bought costumes that are poorly made in Chinese sweatshops.
Posted at 8:48PM on October 19th 2009 by kim @ mommyknows
Gee, I know being non-conformist is all the rage these days, but as a child specialist, I've got to make the case for not traumatizing your kids for the sake of your stupid principles. Just because you want to show off your self-righteous artsy side, doesn't mean that your kid isn't going to be going door-to-door being asked exactly why he's dressed as dog droppings. If your kid wants to be a Party City brand Batman, then dammit give your kid one day where he can pick what he wants to wear. If he ASKS for the Tutu robot, then go from there, but don't force your non-conformist idealism on your child who can't think past the concrete concept of, "my friends have a cool costume and all I have is this ugly, embarrassing thing my mom made."
Posted at 10:33AM on September 4th 2009 by Anonymous
At least these parents tried to do something original, instead of buying some mass-produced conformist junk. i think they should be applauded for their creativity and effort, and many of these outfits are actually very cute. By discouraging children from showing their individuality, we are giving away our own freedom and diversity. i especially adore the robot with the tutu - why not? A robot can't also be a ballerina? Why is your own vision so narrow and stilied - did your mom make you wear those cheap mass-produced - just like everyone else's costumes? Not mine! And I became an Opera costumer because of it!
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CZQcjQ Very neat article post.Really thank you! Really Great.
Posted at 2:44AM on April 27th 2012 by oem software
p3EGcH Of course, I understand a little about this post but will try cope with it...
Posted at 5:01PM on September 6th 2011 by kaufen generic Cialis
398UNr Last a few years has been to Ibiza, so met a person there whose style of presentation is very similar to yours. But, unfortunately, that person is too far from the Internet...
Posted at 5:01PM on September 6th 2011 by kaufen Generika Cialis
Super inforamtvie writing; keep it up.
Posted at 9:04AM on August 7th 2011 by Debra
Keep these atricles coming as they've opened many new doors for me.
Posted at 5:23AM on August 6th 2011 by Yelhsa
That's a mold-breaker. Great tihnikng!
Posted at 10:35PM on May 3rd 2011 by Wilma
jenni, thanks for the heads' up - that's just sad.
Posted at 8:42PM on October 30th 2009 by Holly Jahangiri
I think they look like snails... and I think they are cute.
Posted at 8:38PM on October 30th 2009 by Emily
nice catch jenni... wont be looking at this blog
Posted at 9:00PM on October 19th 2009 by :P
I am with Carol. There is nothing wrong with most of these costumes. My four year old asked to be a pink ballerina robot! I think it's sad that most kids have cheap, store-bought costumes that are poorly made in Chinese sweatshops.
Posted at 8:48PM on October 19th 2009 by kim @ mommyknows
they do look like dog turds lol
Posted at 8:25AM on October 16th 2009 by Chad
Gee, I know being non-conformist is all the rage these days, but as a child specialist, I've got to make the case for not traumatizing your kids for the sake of your stupid principles. Just because you want to show off your self-righteous artsy side, doesn't mean that your kid isn't going to be going door-to-door being asked exactly why he's dressed as dog droppings. If your kid wants to be a Party City brand Batman, then dammit give your kid one day where he can pick what he wants to wear. If he ASKS for the Tutu robot, then go from there, but don't force your non-conformist idealism on your child who can't think past the concrete concept of, "my friends have a cool costume and all I have is this ugly, embarrassing thing my mom made."
Posted at 10:33AM on September 4th 2009 by Anonymous
At least these parents tried to do something original, instead of buying some mass-produced conformist junk. i think they should be applauded for their creativity and effort, and many of these outfits are actually very cute. By discouraging children from showing their individuality, we are giving away our own freedom and diversity. i especially adore the robot with the tutu - why not? A robot can't also be a ballerina? Why is your own vision so narrow and stilied - did your mom make you wear those cheap mass-produced - just like everyone else's costumes? Not mine! And I became an Opera costumer because of it!
Posted at 11:23AM on August 20th 2009 by Carol
Wow jenni, that's a burn, yet it's true
Posted at 11:07AM on August 20th 2009 by wow jenni
Wow, way to rip off costume pop and not credit them. costumepop [dot] com/costume-buzz/how-not-to-make-kids-costumes/
Posted at 2:10AM on August 17th 2009 by jenni
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