T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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819.1 | what I liked | RUSAVD::HEALEY | M&ES, MRO4, 297-2426 | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:27 | 21 |
|
Hi Alice,
I hated the infant gowns for a winter baby. They are too thin
to keep the baby warm and those long strings made me nervous.
I liked the one piece suits the best. Separates are a pain
because the top is always creeping up. For an older child
separates are fine because they no longer are being picked
up constantly and they are not lying in their clothes.
As far as one piece goes, make sure that they have snaps
all down the legs so that you can get them off easily. I had
one outfit for Lauren that didn't and changing time wasn't
very easy the days she wore it.
I layered too. Lauren always had a onesie, then a one piece
outfit, (stretch suit, some people call then), then a sweater
because my house is cold.
Karen
|
819.2 | my thoughts, boy it seems like yesterday | CHORDZ::WALTER | | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:44 | 33 |
| Alice,
I happen to have liked the infant gowns (sorry Karen!) for the night
time when they were sleeping. Or, I should say, Paul liked them
because he could move his feet around and they were easy for changing
in the middle of night instead of having to unsnap a million buttons.
Or, I should say that my husband preferred them and if I wanted help at
night in changing Paul, it was easier when he knew that Paul was
dressed in the gowns.
During the day, I alway had a onsie on under everything and I do agree
with Karen here that the two pieces are a pain. I found the zipper one
piece oufits were nice and with the onesie, I never worried about
catching Paul's skin with the zipper.
Remember to have lot of HATS. During the winter and colder months,
they should always have something on their head if outside.
As far as feet, Paul never kept anything on his so we bought 3-6 month
socks that could fit up his calf enough that he couldn't get them off.
When the child still has their cord stub intact, it is recommended that
you do not use onesie's to allow the stub to breathe. In this case,
you can use the infant tee-shirts (boy they are cute, but Karen is
right, they will slide up) and we always put a "big" sweater/shirt over
and used pants with the socks above.
During the day, and when we were at home, Paul stayed in PJ's (no pun
intended for those of you that know Paul is officially Paul Joseph) but
the terry ones and not the heavy duty sleepers.
cj
|
819.3 | | SPESHR::JACOBSON | | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:49 | 1 |
| Are blanket sleepers necessary for newborns or are they too heavy?
|
819.4 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Fri Sep 02 1994 11:54 | 16 |
| I second it that the gowns are great for those night-time
diaper changes.
I don't have any other suggestions - the last couple
pretty much spell it out. (ie. one piece outfits are great -
hats a definite must - as well as onsies)
The only thing I would add is that for winter be sure to
get a snowsuit and not just a jacket. Always keep an
extra blanket in the car just in case you have car problems
or something (though unlikely this happened to me and when
it is winter and you have no heat in the car baby is not
happy)
Best of luck with you bundle of joy
Pam
|
819.5 | | SPESHR::JACOBSON | | Fri Sep 02 1994 12:17 | 5 |
| I would also like suggestions for throughout the entire year. If I can
find some larger clothes I would pick those up cheap too. For girls
does anyone use dresses other than for holidays and pictures? My
mother is all hyped up about buying cute little dresses if it is a
girl.
|
819.6 | | CSC32::P_SO | Get those shoes off your head! | Fri Sep 02 1994 12:59 | 7 |
| My sister-in-law has girls and they rarely wear dresses
except for church and pictures.
They do have cute little one piece sets for girls. I love the
flowery balloon type overalls for little girls.
Pam
|
819.7 | | PCBUOA::GIUNTA | | Fri Sep 02 1994 13:40 | 7 |
| We practically never put dresses on Jessica when she was a baby. Only
now that she's 3 and has turned into Miss Fashion Plate and insists on
wearing dresses everyday have I even started to buy and make dresses.
I much preferred pants and such to keep her warm and comfortable. Plus,
I have boy-girl twins, so I bought lots of unisex stuff when they were
kids. Can't do that as much now, but they do still share some t-shirts
and jackets and stuff like that.
|
819.8 | Not too warm... | STOWOA::STOCKWELL | Mad about Moos | Fri Sep 02 1994 13:43 | 14 |
| My husband (Bob) and I always thought we had to dress Alyssa in Xtra
warm clothes (she was born the end of Oct.) - cuz we thought babies
needed Xtra layers. Anyways, one of her checkups the dr. said that she
is heat sensitive and that we didn't need to dress her so warm. She
said to us "dress her as you would dress yourself". So, if your child
starts to develop a rash - it may be caused by over dressing him/her.
Of course, always have them in hats and mittens when going outside.
I found that it was easy for her to catch windburn - so make sure the
face is covered from the wind.
Joolz
|
819.9 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | skewered shitake | Fri Sep 02 1994 16:35 | 7 |
| Two piece sweat outfits worked best for us in the winter. As for night
sleeping, it depends where your baby sleeps. Mine have always slept
with me when they were small (I am too lazy to get out of bed to feed
a baby and my house is cold) so I dressed them down at night and more
warmly when they were out and about.
meg
|
819.10 | | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Tue Sep 06 1994 12:16 | 29 |
|
I always liked the gowns .... my 3 lived in them until they were about
3 mos old (which is about when they outgrew them). They aren't
particularly warm by themselves .... I got a few long sleeve t-shirts,
and would use those or regluar baby t-shirts underneath. If it was
real chilly, I'd slap a pair of sweatpants on as well, and some sox.
They seemed to prefer that to one-piece pjs.
I've always used regular t-shirts, and not onesies. Never particularly
cared for the onesies, and I *hate* those snaps (I guess my kids
wriggle too much or something), and trying to get them done up. Plus
it seemed like you're trapping a lot more heat 'down there', and this
isn't good for girls or boys. So, we just kept pulling their t-shirts
down. If you can get the Spencer t-shirts, they're made quite a bit
longer than any others, so it's not much of a problem. By 1 yr old,
they were all using mostly regular 'little boy' t-shirts. (Montgomery
Ward used to make some *wonderful* 1/2 poly, 1/2 cotton ones)
For everything else .... the more 'one piece' stuff you can get, the
better! To 'keep warm' we always went with a larger sweat-shirt. A
couple sizes bigger than what 'fits', works wonders to keep them warm.
On the flip side .... if you use 2-piece outfits, and you have to
change all the baby's clothes, you don't need to 'freeze' the baby all
at once - you can change the top, wait till he/she warms up a bit, then
change the bottom. With a one-piece, at some point, they're pretty
much naked. Brrrr! They HATE that! (-:
|
819.11 | be careful buying clothes for crawling babies! | NAPIER::HEALEY | M&ES, MRO4, 297-2426 | Tue Sep 06 1994 13:39 | 13 |
|
Not really on the subject of newborn clothes but still baby clothes...
I bought Laurens clothes for fall, mostly size 18 months, even though
she is only 9 months. One mistake I made... a couple of the one
piece pant/top outfits were very baggy around the middle. Well,
when she crawls, her knees go right up into the clothing and she
gets stuck and can't go anywhere! She found this very frustrating.
I had to put these two outfits away until she learns to walk since
crawling is impossible in them.
Karen
|
819.12 | I liked the LLBean Baby bag. | RANGER::OBERTI | | Tue Sep 06 1994 14:19 | 15 |
|
I had a Sept baby so when winter came around he was 3-5 months old.
There were two things that I wouldn't live without:
1)LLBean makes a baby bag that worked great! We used it all the time when
Nick was little.
2)Carter's makes a sleeper without legs, it's more like a bag with arms.
That worked out really well. It's heavier than the newborn nightgowns
and they can still move their legs.
Here's a comment on sizes..I found that my boys wore clothes that were
twice their age. ie...When they were 3 months they wore 6-9 month
clothes.
|
819.13 | Layers, yes; Onesies, yes; Cotton jumpsuits, yes; Dresses, not often! | AMCUCS::MEHRING | | Tue Sep 06 1994 14:36 | 29 |
| RE: .11 Good point - and the same thing happens with dresses! And when they
start walking, this continues - my daughter often catches her foot in her
dress as she's getting up from sitting, so that's why I don't like to put
dresses on her too much. On the other hand, it's the only way to prevent (well
mostly) those comments like "How old is *he*?" ;-) Depending on my mood, I
say "It's a she - she has her brother's clothes on..." or simply ignore them
(if she's obviously in PINK). I also try to get tops that have a ruffle on the
bottom, and put them with leggings, but they aren't always easy to find...
As for clothes for an infant, I am a Onesie proponent - come on, 3 little
snaps aren't *that* hard, are they? I suppose it's a trade-off, and I'd much
rather do the snaps once than constantly have to pull down t-shirts...
Other tips - buy fabrics carefully - the more it gives, the easier it will be
to put on and the more comfortable it will be for the child (thus, the more it
will get worn). Gymboree makes about the best quality cotton-knit jumpsuits
I've seen (yes, they can be costly, but they fit well, wash well, last well, and
look great!). Also, don't go crazy on newborn/infant stuff - they will grow
out of it so quickly! Just get a couple things until you have a chance to try
out what you think works best for you (and the child, of course). Most babies
wear the terry sleepers for the first 3 months anyway, then "real clothes" -
which by that time could be in the 9-12 mos. size range. I, for one, never give
a baby gift (clothes) that's smaller than 12 months for this reason. Of course,
my babies have both been on the "big" side, but this just seems more practical
to me.
Have fun - kids clothes *are* so irresistable!
-Cori
|
819.14 | Baby Snowsuits | CHORDZ::WALTER | | Tue Sep 06 1994 14:44 | 8 |
| LL Bean Baby Bag -- I forgot! I got one from my father in law. He
owns Squannacook River Outfitters in Townsend, MA and it was a Columbia
I believe.
This is a snow suit type thing that was for 6-12 months. Paul outgrew
it at 6 months. It is very warm and we went everywhere in it!
cj
|
819.15 | | LJSRV1::LEGER | | Tue Sep 06 1994 14:53 | 24 |
|
I second the "bag sleepers". Nicholas was born in December, and he was
always in the onzies and heavy one piece pj's.
At night, I would put him in the gerber bag sleepers (with a onzie
also). They were great because they are like a gown, no legs to strugle
with and they were nice and heavy. ( I got them as a gift, purchased at
sears).
As for clothing size...well, you can generally assume they were 2X's
thier age...3 mos wears 6 mos clothes, however, if you have a big guy
(like I do), you can't always assume.
At 3 mos Nicholas was wearing 6-9 mos, and now at 8 mos he is in 18-24
mos clothes! I have learned to buy the bigger size if I am not sure,
becasue some of this stuff shrinks! However, I always try to keep the
next size on hand, becasue you just never can tell when he is going
to need the bigger size.
.....Now the decision...I need to buy a snow suit for the winter, and
don't know what size to get? He is just starting to wear 18/24 mos
clothes. Should I get a 18/24 mos snow suit? or should I go with a 2T?
Anne Marie
|
819.16 | | ENQUE::ROLLMAN | | Wed Sep 07 1994 14:26 | 23 |
|
my favorites for winter babies:
nighttime - one piece blanket sleepers, the kind without legs
daytime - one piece sleepers, the kind with legs, made out of that
stretch terry cloth stuff.
I strongly favor sweat suits for both sexes while they are
learning to crawl, walk, climb, etc. My almost 4-year-old is
finally getting big enough and coordinated enough so that a
dress/skirt no longer interferes. She might be a girl, after all
(as I sit here in my blue jeans and t-shirt).
BTW, when a kid's legs pull up into their pantlegs while
trying to crawl/walk, put some tennis wrist sweatbands around their
ankles to hold the pantleg in place. (You can find something
similar in the Right Start or First Step catalogs, but *much*
more expensive).
Pat
|
819.17 | Snaps in front | ALFA1::PEASLEE | | Wed Sep 07 1994 14:26 | 5 |
| I'm not too experienced, Alyssa is just over a month old...I've found
that outfits with snaps in front are easiest to get on and off. I've
seen some cute outfits with snaps in the back, but they are a hassle to
get on and off.
|
819.18 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Troubleshootin' Mama | Wed Sep 07 1994 15:43 | 25 |
|
My March baby wore a blanket sleeping bag at night, and
one piece outfits during the day. March/April outfits
had legs and longish sleeves. From May on, he's been in
one piece outfits with short sleeves and short/no legs.
I kept him in the lightweight terry play/sleep outfits if
we were staying home, and dressed him if we went out (socks
on the feet in those chilly months).
I never cared for the drawstring nightgowns - I don't know
why, I just never did.
Andrew has eczema, and snaps and zippers now tend to irritate his skin,
so I'm starting to dress him in sweats w/socks at night to
minimize the rash. I've also been told to be careful not
to overdress him, as this exacerbates the problem. When it
gets colder, I'll revert to the PJ's, with a onesie underneath
to protect from snaps/zippers.
BTW, you can't own enough onesies. In the summer, they make
great daytime outfits all by themselves, and layer well in
the winter. If you get too many in the newborn size (as gifts),
exchange them for medium and large.
Karen
|
819.19 | dress large! | NAPIER::HEALEY | M&ES, MRO4, 297-2426 | Thu Sep 08 1994 09:14 | 16 |
|
Also on baby sizes...
I never had any "newborn" sized clothes. Her onesies were size small
(which is larger than newborn) and they lasted until she was 4-5
months old. All the clothes that she wore the first month or so
were rather large on her but they fit her for a long time.
I also didn't want Lauren in sleepwear during the day. In the
morning, I showered and dressed, then got Lauren dressed in day
wear too, even while on maternity leave. I'm not sure if this makes
any sense... it kind of gave me a feeling of accomplishment if
we were both dressed in day clothes fairly early in the day.
Karen
|
819.20 | Take me out to the yard sales... | XCUSME::HATCH | On the cutting edge of obsolescence | Mon Sep 12 1994 10:29 | 7 |
| So much good information here. I went out and bought some of the fuzzy
sleepers Sunday, 3 of them are Winnie the Pooh from Sears which got
rave reviews. And ever the savy consumer, I paid a whopping, $1.00 for
all of them.
Gail
soon to be author of "Baby on the Cheap" 8^)
|
819.21 | Hooded sweaters! | ODIXIE::BAINE | | Wed Sep 14 1994 14:56 | 31 |
| I've had one summer baby and one winter baby. The summer baby wore
simple sunsuits and T-shirts for about 3 months! It was great.
Loved the LL Bean Baby Bag. Loved one-piece bag sleepers.
Also great, a hoodsweater that zips up the back. On really blustery,
windy days, the hood goes up snug around the face and keeps the wind
from getting to their ears. SOmetimes hoods on snowsuits don't fit very
well. Also, they can wriggle out of the sweater too well since the
zipper is in the back.
I also bought bigger socks to use a knee socks.
Because of the dry cold winter air, I used to put Eurcene cream on
their cheeks each morning so it wouldn't get chapped. They always
looked like their faces were a little shiny, but it's great stuff.
Non-allergenic and all. It's a little expensive, but goes a long time.
Your pedi will probably tell you not to bathe your infant every day in
winter. A sponge or washcloth bath will do, so you don't have to
totally expose your baby. We also used a glycerine wash in winter, as
any of the soaps (and especially Ivory!) were very drying.
For snowsuits, try to get one second hand. There are many good
consignment shops discussed in this notes file. The snowsuits can cost
up to $80 or more, and hardly get worn out when they are on little
tots.
With the help of this notes file, you'll do fine. Good luck.
KB
|
819.22 | How ocld is to cold | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:18 | 27 |
|
I currently have two horses that are boarded out at a barn down the
street and I currently clean stalls 2 times a week Mondays and Fridays.
My husband takes wenesday and my sister has tuesday,thursday and
Sunday.. MY husband I both take care of them on Saturday.
Any here's my question.
It takes me about 45 minutes to do the stalls feed and water.
It's partial board which mean they feed in the morning and let
out..
How cold is to cold to have a baby out ? I could ask the barn
manager if I could use her house to keep the baby in while I am
cleaning the stalls and I also have heater that I could bring to the
barn..
This is only for this winter, the horses will be moving back to my
house in the spring and I can have the baby monitor on while I am doing
the stalls.
Thanks
Donna
|
819.23 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | skewered shitake | Wed Sep 14 1994 15:57 | 12 |
| Are you going to be inside the stalls and out of the wind, or outside?
with Carrie and Atlehi, I put them in a front pack and zipped my coat
around the baby and me when we were out for long periods of time in the
winter. I kept a wool hat on her so her head could poke out for air.
We have a front pack that will hold kids up to 30 pounds so this has
been a solution on cold days.
I would still like to find a "mommy coat" from tibet which has extra
room and a hole in it for a head to poke out of for a back carrier.
meg
|
819.24 | OUt of the wind | BRAT::FULTZ | DONNA FULTZ | Thu Sep 15 1994 12:23 | 7 |
|
I would be in the barn out of the wind. I have one of those new
packs that you zip up that lays on your chest.
donna
|
819.25 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | skewered shitake | Thu Sep 15 1994 13:35 | 7 |
| Donna,
Then I would get an oversized coat so you can zip the little one inside
it with you after you put her in the carrier. Alana and I hiked all
over the place on cold days last winter with Atlehi set up this way.
meg
|
819.26 | I'd do it ..... | CLOUD9::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Thu Sep 15 1994 18:30 | 8 |
| Once you're out of the wind, snow whatever, it's a lot easier to keep
them warm. The carrier and coat sounds even better, but I think if you
can have the baby warm in the car, and then transfer the car seat to
the barn and add an extra blanket or two, you'll be FINE! The biggest
challenge might be avoiding a sudden 'chill' and then trying to warm
her up again.
|
819.27 | When did you start to buy? | WMOIS::LYONS_S | | Fri Feb 24 1995 17:18 | 19 |
|
I am expecting my first child in August but this is my second
pregnancy. I miscaried between 8 and 9 weeks. During my first
pregnancy a couple of close friends gave me small gifts (some were
clothing type items)to congratulate me. Well, I have since put those
gifts in my hope chest. I am now almost 16 weeks pregnant and doing
fine and am very excited about this pregnancy. I tend to stope and
look at the children's sections when I go into stores and am tempted to
buy an item or two when the price is unbelievable but something holds
me back.
I could have bought a neutral $50 snowsuit for $5 and other great
bargains as well, but I guess I'm afraid to buy anything just yet.
I guess my question is......how far along were you when you started to
purchase clothing and other items for your baby?
|
819.28 | Been there, done that | CSLALL::JACQUES_CA | Crazy ways are evident | Mon Feb 27 1995 08:26 | 22 |
| I too lost my first, but had bought just a couple of items that
were too good a bargain to pass up. I even took it a step further,
they were dresses! But hey, they were brand new Polly Flinders for
only $6. each! Luckily, when I did complete term with my second
pregnancy, she was a girl.
When I bought the dresses, I just kept in mind that they may
instead be a great gift for someone else's baby. So if you really
don't want to pass up that great bargain, try looking at it as a
possible gift for someone else if you don't want to just hang on
to it. They could always be sold through here also. Keeping them
(the dresses) seemed to be my symbols of hope.
cj *->
For the second one, I waited till the beginning of my sixth month.
Then I decided not to keep living with fear and start enjoying my
pregnancy. I went out and bought my bassinet and bought just a
couple of cutesy things. I didn't buy much though until after
my baby showers (I had three) were out of they way and could see
what I really needed.
cj *->
|
819.29 | ex | POWDML::AJOHNSTON | beannachd | Mon Feb 27 1995 08:48 | 20 |
| OK, so I'm a pig.
I just about 6 months now and I haven't bought a single item of
clothing.
I've made my list of must-have items and I've done some shopping around
to see what's available and where for the basics; but I'm holding off
buying until I see what the next couple of months bring in [My sister
is sending along a box of things that her son, age 8 mos., can no
longer use] and also just how large my son is at birth.
Then, of course, I shall probably embark upon an orgy of purchasing and
probably over-buy. Passing up things on sale has been excruciating, but
it would break my heart to have him be the right size in entirely the
wrong season.
I have been making quilts and planning a Christmas stocking and buying
toiletries and linens and a stroller and ... just not clothes. Not yet.
Annie
|
819.30 | | ZENDIA::MCPARTLAN | | Mon Feb 27 1995 10:02 | 19 |
| Hi Serena,
I guess our stories really are quite similar. I was in TJ MAXX 2
weekends ago and came across a London Fog snowsuit that was just
beautiful for $10. I was with my girlfriend who convinced me to buy it.
She kept telling me that it is not bad luck to buy stuff early, and how
could I pass up such a good buy? Up until then I have pretty much stayed
away from infant clothes and all that.
Even though my own clothes were getting to be skin tight, I waited until
we had the ultrasound and saw the baby was alive and moving around
before I bought a few maternity clothes. I think I'm really starting to
let myself get in to it now and not be afraid.
I'm scheduled for the Alfa Fetoprotein test next Monday and a little
nervous about that. I think once that comes back ok I'll really go
hog-wild and start buying the little one lots of things...
Donna
|
819.31 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | proud counter-culture McGovernik | Mon Feb 27 1995 10:37 | 8 |
| Add me to the "I'll buy things when I know she is real" list. However,
I was glad people gave me some stuff before Atlehi was born, as I had
the post-partum from hell for the first three weeks and couldn't get
out of bed, much less get enthusiastic about shopping. Brown recluse
spiders can do horrible things to you, particularly when you don't know
what nailed you.
meg
|
819.32 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | No turning back | Mon Feb 27 1995 12:47 | 11 |
|
I didn't buy any baby clothes for my first. I got
things at my shower and collected hand-me-downs from my
sisters. (So, you're not a pig, Annie!)
I bought two outfits before my son was born, because I
had this feeling it was a boy. Still, I bought neutral
outfits, and they were too small (one got returned unworn,
the other got worn exactly once - home from the hospital).
|
819.33 | Shopping is fun AFTER they are born, too! | SUPER::HARRIS | | Mon Feb 27 1995 12:49 | 15 |
| Count me in, too. I think it's tough to start buying clothes too soon
when you've experience a miscarriage. Fortunately, mine were so early,
that I hadn't accumulated much. But, the few items that I did have
were a tough reminder.
With my son, I had only the basic essentials when he was born. But,
he came along in November, and it was too cold to go outdoors. So, I
took advantage of his lack of clothes to make several trips to the mall
for mom to walk, and Andy to get some new outfits.
With my second, I think it was more a case of "let's see what we can
use from what we've got". Since she ended up being a girl, my husband
shopped on his way to pick us, so she'd have something pink, and new.
Peggy
|
819.34 | Accessories/bedroom things | WMOIS::LYONS_S | | Fri Mar 31 1995 17:35 | 19 |
|
Don't know if this is the appropriate entry to add this note to but
thought it might be better than adding a "new" note. If the following
is covered in another topic, a pointer would be greatly appreciated.
I am just starting to decide what to do with the baby's room. This is
my first and I'm anxious to decorate. I don't know the sex of the baby
and will not be finding out (until delivery of course!). I was
thinking of doing Winnie the Pooh as the theme. My question is...
where does one shop for crib accessories, borders, etc. etc. to do the
baby's room in? I live in Nashua. Can you get most items where you
shop for infant clothes?
Thanks in advance and my apologies if thisn't isn't the right place to
enter this.
Serena
|
819.35 | | ZENDIA::MCPARTLAN | | Fri Mar 31 1995 17:39 | 10 |
| Serena,
I was in the Burlington Coat Factory at the Nashua Mall on Wed and they
have tons of baby stuff, furniture, bedding, clothes, etc. You might
want to check in there. I don't remember seeing Winnie the Pooh, but I
think they had Paddington Bear. They have a lot of stuff. My mother
says she needs to get a part-time job so she can buy everything she
thinks is cute for the baby... wouldn't that be nice??
Donna
|
819.36 | | MRKTNG::MURRY | Who do you think I think I am? | Fri Mar 31 1995 20:11 | 17 |
| Serena,
I was in Tiny Totland in Manchester this week and I noticed they have
a cute crib set in Winnie the Pooh and may have borders as well.
It has an off-white background so it would look good with a wood stained
crib and dresser. They have a very good selection, but since we
already had our set we didn't really look at prices and I don't know
how low they are even though they claim to have the lowest.
What we did for the wallpaper and border was go to Home Depot and look
through all the books on decorating nurseries and children's rooms - we
found one we loved and went with it. Then we went to Burlington Coat
Factory in Nashua and found a crib set that went well with the
wallpaper and border we chose.
Good Luck,
Dawn
|
819.37 | Boston Baby | BIGQ::ACKERMAN | | Sat Apr 01 1995 14:27 | 4 |
| Boston Baby in Danvers/Peabody on route 1 has Winnie the Pooh crib
sets.
Michelle
|
819.38 | | POWDML::AJOHNSTON | beannachd | Mon Apr 03 1995 09:35 | 19 |
| I live in Nashua and I shopped all over for the baby's room.
Paint, paper, border, and honey-comb shades came from Home Depot
[Nashua].
A couple large-ish pictures for the walls came from Prints Plus
[Nashua]
My glider [which will not match, but it's the fabric I wanted] is from
Tiny Totland [Manchester, NH].
Crib bumpers are from Toys'R'Us [I wanted a solid colour]
Fabric for the window valances came from Calico Corners [Acton, MA]
I've seen Winnie the Pooh crib linen sets [bumpers, comforter, sheet]
at Lechmere, Tiny Totland, and Toy'R'Us.
Annie
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819.39 | 25% off at Ames? | VIVE::STOLICNY | | Mon Apr 03 1995 09:48 | 6 |
|
One of the chain discount stores in New England (I think Ames but
don't quote me on it!) had Winnie-the-Pooh nursery accessories
advertised in their weekly flyer for 25% off.
cj/
|
819.40 | Thanks and directions?, please! | WMOIS::LYONS_S | | Mon Apr 03 1995 10:12 | 11 |
|
Thank you for the pointers so far. Two questions....
1) Where in Manchester is Tiny Totland (sounds like a fun place to
shop).
2) What are your opinions on the Winnie the Pooh theme? Too boyish?
Thanks again for all the pointers!
|
819.41 | | CHIEFF::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Mon Apr 03 1995 10:58 | 7 |
|
I did my daughter's room in primary colors, with teddy bears
and balloons. Some may have considered it boyish, but I
really didn't want pastels (and was already working with a
brown rug ;-) ). I also hoped it would be used for
future kids. However, Emily decided to pull down the border,
so it would have needed changing anyway. Instead, we moved ;-) :-)
|
819.42 | | CDROM::BLACHEK | | Mon Apr 03 1995 14:08 | 4 |
| I'd say Winnie the Pooh is nonsexist. Most girls I know have
some of the stuffed animals and seem to like the theme.
judy
|
819.43 | | POWDML::AJOHNSTON | beannachd | Mon Apr 03 1995 14:24 | 9 |
| _I_ certainly don't think Pooh is too masculine.
'Little Miss Priss' here grew up on Pooh and I still insist on having
at least one of my Pooh pictures in my personal space. In fact, I was
so steeped in Pooh that I had to seriously consider whether to leave
any Pooh stuff in the nursery as I was afraid a boy would ourgrow Pooh
by age 2 ...
Annie
|
819.44 | | CHIEFF::JENNISON | Revive us, Oh Lord | Mon Apr 03 1995 15:00 | 5 |
|
Annie,
My daughter at age 2 (nearly 3) is still pretty hooked on
Pooh, FWIW.
|
819.45 | | TLE::C_STOCKS | Cheryl Stocks | Mon Apr 03 1995 16:50 | 6 |
| My 7-year-old is still very fond of Pooh (but he got teased a bit in first
grade, so now he reserves his Pooh t-shirts only for weekends). Pooh and
friends are included in all the games with the Lion King characters and
power rangers at our house.
cheryl
|
819.46 | <sigh> | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Tue Apr 04 1995 11:21 | 11 |
| re: .45
> My 7-year-old is still very fond of Pooh (but he got teased a bit in first
> grade, so now he reserves his Pooh t-shirts only for weekends). ...
Damned shame, that. So far this is the one largest aspect of growing
up that I truly dread having my kids experience ...
but I digress.... < now back to our regularly scheduled topic.... >
- Tom
|
819.47 | | ZENDIA::MCPARTLAN | | Tue Apr 04 1995 11:35 | 9 |
| Hi Serena,
I was flipping thru a baby catalog from JC Penney this am and they have
the Pooh set. I made an effort to try and remember how much it was, but
I still forgot (seems I'm doing a lot of that lately). The set was
mostly blue, but also included Piglet (?) who is very pink. So I guess
it could go either way.
Donna
|
819.48 | ex | MSBCS::MIDTTUN | Lisa Midttun,223-1714,MLO5-5 M/S E71 | Wed Apr 05 1995 11:25 | 7 |
| Sears (try the one at the Pheasant Lane Mall in Nashua NH) has
tons of Winnie the Pooh stuff too....Go with what you like, WTP is
non-gender specific in my mind; And primary colors are supposed to
be great for kids (remember after the newborn stage, they'll be
very interested in what's neat to look at in their room!). My two
girls both love Pooh (so much so that I sewed up a full set of all
the animals!)
|
819.49 | Going with Pooh! | WMOIS::LYONS_S | | Wed Apr 05 1995 11:41 | 25 |
|
Well, the Sears at the Pheasant Lane Mall didn't have everything I
needed, so I went to the one in Manchester. I did go with Pooh. I got
wall hangings, border, and crib set. I can't help it! I'm a major fan.
My NH license plate is WTPOOH!
This pattern has Pooh and Piglet being carried away by balloons on the
comforter and then the crib sheet has all the characters floating with
balloons. The balloons add more "neutral" colors like mint green,
pink, baby blue, yellow and purple. I chose this set for now and am
leaving everything packaged up for now because someone just told me
about another pattern at another store that I may like better.
Thank you for all the feedback....it was very much appreciated!
Serena
p.s.
Has anyone else had the problem with finding a set they like and trying
to get the curtains and the curtains are huge? I wanted to get the
curtains that matched the set but they were enormous. I have 27"W x
54"?L windows....the curtains were 83"W x 64"L. Sheesh! How I wish I
could sew!
|
819.50 | Classic Pooh | STAR::MRUSSO | | Wed Apr 05 1995 14:56 | 6 |
| There is also a new line for babies that is the Classic Pooh. It is
very cute. I saw it in the Right Start Catalog. I'm not sure
which stores have it.
Mary Russo
|
819.51 | perfect 20/20 hindsight | DELNI::CHALMERS | | Wed Apr 05 1995 19:19 | 12 |
| Serena,
we went with pastel Winnie the Pooh in Chris' room, and had done Nick's
in pastel Disney Babies. The wallpaper in each room is pastel stripes, and
we chose pastel borders for each in the appropriate theme. Now that Nick's
5.5 and Chris is 2.5, we regret not having gone with primamry colors. Had
we done so, redecorating for an older child could have been accomplished
simply with new borders and swapping out accessories. We have had no luck
in finding pastel borders of cars, trucks, baseball, dinosaurs, etc..., so
now we'll be forced to strip the pastel wallpaper 'base' and start all over.
FWIW...
|
819.52 | | CDROM::BLACHEK | | Thu Apr 06 1995 11:09 | 16 |
| When we fixed up the baby's room, I was pregnant and it was hard to
imagine having an older child in the room. I looked at all sorts of
baby stuff. A friend gave me the advice to decorate the room in a
not-so-babyish style and to use accessories to babify it. I'm
really glad I did.
I used navy and white striped curtains with a white with navy polka
dot valance. The crib skirt and bedding matched, as did the diaper
bag. We used Disney posters and stuffed animals. When the baby
grew (she's almost 5) we could adapt things as needed.
They really grow and change so quickly and an older child tells you
that they don't want baby stuff more eloquently than a baby tells
you that they don't like the older decor. ;-)
judy
|
819.53 | Love the Classic Pooh set much better! | WMOIS::LYONS_S | | Fri Apr 07 1995 10:52 | 20 |
|
Well, I knew I shouldn't have done it but I did! I was in Manchester
last night so I just had to stop in Tiny Totland! Big mistake. I
absolutely LOVE the Classic Winnie the Pooh crib set and etc they had
there. I feel like I could never put up the set I already bought
knowing that the other one is out there. I will definately return the
one I have but I am going to search another place to purchase the set I
like better. In total with two window valances, 4 rolls of border and
the crib set (without the crib skirt) is $350. A little pricey I
thought but then again I REALLY like it. It's a good thing my husband
was with me otherwise I would have charged the whole thing and included
the honeypot lamp and the matching cushion set for the high chair!
So....if anyone comes across the "Classic Pooh" set in their travels, I
would greatly appreciate a pointer!(In addition to the Right Start
catalog that Mary Russo mentioned, I've already ordered the catalog)
Thanks in advance!
Serena
|
819.54 | Well worth it!! | ALFA2::PEASLEE | | Fri Apr 07 1995 11:26 | 7 |
| I know what you mean about prices. My daughters room is decorated in a
Beatrix Potter Petter Rabbit theme. Its well worth the price when she
looks at the borders and giggles or talks to the bunnies on her crib
sheets.
NMP
|
819.55 | Tiny Totland | SUPER::HARRIS | | Fri Apr 07 1995 11:37 | 6 |
| Please keep us posted, if you find the Pooh set less expensive anywhere
else. Tiny Totland does a pretty good job of discounting the things
that they carry. So, if you find a better price, I'm be interested to
know where.
Peggy
|
819.56 | Baby Specialties | STRATA::RDOZOIS | justice will prevail... | Fri Apr 07 1995 12:05 | 12 |
| I've just finished doing our baby room in Classic Pooh. Pooh was my
favorite so thats what we went with. I got it from Baby Specialties in
Worcester and they also have a store in Natick. The Classic Pooh come
in a white background or off-white. (I think in the Right Start catalog
they may just have the off-white.) But I changed the Pooh lamp that
matched the border to one made by Charpentiere (sp) that was more of a
scuptured look to it. Also the mobile that comes with the set has only
Winnie on it and I found one at Toys-R-Us that had all the charaters
(and was $25 cheaper.) You might want to call Baby Specialties and price
them. The number in Worcester is 791-2599.
Renee
|
819.57 | Pooh at Tiny Totland | WMOIS::LYONS_S | | Fri May 12 1995 17:00 | 10 |
|
Well, after much research...I went with Tiny Totland for all my Classic
Pooh stuff for the baby's room. Their prices were the best. I'm very
excited to get the room done. Now if I can just make up my mind as to
which color to choose for the paint to go with the border!
This is so much fun!
Serena
Due Aug. 18th
|
819.58 | Classic Pooh | JULIET::CARLSON_CH | | Fri May 12 1995 20:01 | 8 |
| My daughter, Rachel (1 yr), has her room done in the Classic Pooh.
Though I did not purchase the matching border, she does have
the Wall Hanging (Pooh & his honey pot). I painted her room a
warm gold ("Corn Husk Gold" to be exact). It pretty close to the
same shade that is represented in the comforter set. I absolutely
love the color - and everyone remarks at how "warm" the room feels.
Cheryl
|
819.59 | Calvert's closing | CSLALL::JACQUES_CA | Crazy ways are evident | Fri Jun 09 1995 14:22 | 21 |
| I may be the last to know, but Calvert's in Tewksbury/Lowell is
going out of business. I just went there at lunch today to pick
up a dress for Angeline I had seen a month ago, but couldn't
afford at the time.
Everything right now is 30% off, and pickings are slim. But they
do still have a lot of Carter's stuff floating around, particularly
crib accessories. They have a lot of Carter's pj's for size 4.
In fact, they do have quite a bit of clothing left in the kids sizes.
The infant department it's hit or miss though and going fast.
The rest of the store's goods I didn't even look at. A clerk there
said after this weekend it would really be picked at. Maybe their
lowering the discount more this weekend?
I know I picked up some nice thermals for Angeline for later this
year. Their Carter's which run small so she'll fit them fine in
the late/fall early winter. Carter's run so small!!!!!
cj *->
|