T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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910.1 | to many yellow veggies? | MARX::FLEURY | | Thu May 16 1991 12:41 | 12 |
|
My daughter also has a nice olive complexion. Frequently when we go to
the pedi's, one of the nurses will comment that she is "yellow" and we
should stop feeding her so many carrots.
In our case, however, it seems to be Michelle's natural coloring. I
cut out yellow veggies entirely for three weeks before the last visit,
and the nurse STILL accused me of feeding her to many carrots!
For what it's worth, my pedi says that lots of yellow veggies is not
harmful, but it can cause the skin to turn yellowish.
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910.2 | Breast Milk Jaundice maybe?... | NEWPRT::NEWELL_JO | Jodi Newell - Irvine, California | Thu May 16 1991 13:13 | 13 |
| Sheryl,
It could very well be your child's natural skin coloring.
or...
Are you breastfeeding her? There is a condition called
Breast Milk Jaundice. I'm not sure a child would get to
9 months without a doctor noticing it but anything is
possible. My son was still 'yellow' at 6 weeks of age
and his billiruben levels were still slightly elevated,
so the pedi took my son off breastmilk and his yellowness
cleared up in about two days. It's worth checking into.
Jodi-
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910.3 | too many veggies? | STAR::LEWIS | | Thu May 16 1991 14:02 | 6 |
| It can also be caused by feeding too many yellow vegetables --
squash, carrots, sweet potatoes, etc. My pedi said to watch for
yellowish skin when I first started Andy on solids. My neighbor's
child looks yellow next to my son and we figured that was probably
the problem. But I'd check with the doctor if you're worried.
Sue
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910.4 | lots of people are yellow | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Thu May 16 1991 15:11 | 6 |
| Lots of people have a yellow tone to their skin. Older books and
articles tend to call it a "sallow complexion" while artists and
fashion designers call it a "warm complexion" in contrast to a
"cool complexion" which has bluish undertones.
--bonnie
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910.5 | Too much beta carotene | LANDO::MOUNTZURIS | | Fri May 17 1991 11:34 | 10 |
| Not to worry. Your 9 month old is eating too many sweet potatoes,
carrots, and squash - as long as the whites of the eyes are white. My
pediatrician noticed my sons yellow skin color before I noticed. When
I brought him in his office he said to me "don't worry, but it is very
common for a 9 month old to have yellow skin, it is caused by too much
beta carotine in the vegetables you are feeding him." So, I started to
give him more peas and green beans and in a couple of weeks, his skin
was not so yellow. Is this what your pedi told you? Please let us
know.
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910.6 | CARROTS, CARROTS, CARROTS! | TRACTR::MAZUR | | Fri May 17 1991 13:04 | 15 |
|
Thanks for all of your replies. We went to the Pedi's yesterday and
Alexa got a clean bill of health, but when the doctor came in she
said "Alexa, do you like carrots?" The doc said that there is really
nothing you can do about it. All of the veggies for babies--sweet
potatoes, carrots, squash, even green beans and peas will cause
the yellow skin tone in some babies. It's called carotinemic (sp?)
By the way--she's 9 mos old and weighs a whopping 22 lbs! The doctor
was happy thought because she's in the 90th percentile for both
weight and height
wow! i can barely remember how small she was when she was born a
month early!!!
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910.7 | | KAOFS::S_BROOK | | Fri May 17 1991 13:27 | 7 |
| I don't mean to be a wet blanket or anything, but I don't see why
the Doctor should be happy because a child is on the 90th percentiles.
All it means is that in a given sampling of 100 babies 90 of them
will be shorter and weigh less than yours. On their own, the
percentile measurements mean nothing. The fact that she is on the
90th percentile for both height and weight does mean that at least
her weight is not out of line compared to her height.
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910.8 | | MILPND::PIMENTEL | | Fri May 17 1991 14:28 | 11 |
| I have one other thought about the yellowish color. You said you
notice it sometimes. Have you observed the color or the baby's outfits
when you notice the yellowish color? Stay away from yellow's and
green's and gold tones. My children have olive skin as does my girl
friends children. I watch the colors I dress my children in (through
training) which prevents the yellowish sick color. However, I've seen
my girlfriend's children dressed in awful colors for their skin (they
are 15 and 13) and they look yellowish in those colors. Just something
to be aware of.
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910.9 | so which skin layer does the carotene show up in? | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Fri May 17 1991 14:52 | 35 |
| The artist in me is unable to refrain from digressing on skin
tones and colors:
There's a yellowish sick color and there's a yellowish warm color.
If you're worried about appearance, buy a good fashion-color book
about analyzing skin tones and choosing colors, or an artist's
instruction book about portrait painting. A lot depends on
whether the yellow is in the surface layer or in the underlying
layer of the skin -- if it's in the underlying layer, you need
different colors than if the underlying layer is a cool blue- or
pink-toned.
Warm and cool colors tend to go muddy or else cancel each other
out when they're mixed together, so if you have a cool underlying
skin tone you'll generally need to wear cool colors to bring out
the underlying cool tone of your skin. The layer of warm yellow
will add a glow, like sunshine in a blue room. Wearing a warm
yellow-toned color like gold or green will bring out the yellow
surface layer and as .8 says make you look sickish as the warm and
cool tones conflict.
On the other hand, if the underlying tone is yellow, you'll
generally look better in warm colors to bring out the warm tones,
while cool colors will call out the cool surface and muddy your
skin tones. This is usually a kind of washed-out dull appearance
that's not as obvious as sallowness.
If you really know how to mix your colors, and have a good eye for
that sort of thing, you can create some really interesting effects
by the way you layer warm and cool colors in relation to your
skin. This is like painting a warm-toned portrait over a
background wash of cool green or blue, or balancing areas of warm
and cool colors when you're decorating a room.
--bonnie
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910.10 | and the artist in me says... | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Fri May 17 1991 16:28 | 2 |
| Avoid purple (opposes yellow on the "color wheel"); it will exaggerate the
yellow cast.
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910.11 | | BCSE::WEIER | Patty, DTN 381-0877 | Fri May 17 1991 16:29 | 8 |
| re .7
Stuart,
I would suggest that the Dr. was happy because the baby was premature,
and she has obviously overcome this - most preemies take 2 years to
'catch up'.
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910.12 | Coloring apparant in babies | WORDY::STEINHART | Pixillated | Mon May 20 1991 11:49 | 17 |
| My daughter inherited my golden-tone (some might say sallow) skin. She
looks much better in yellow than in the traditional pinks.
Color_Me_Beautiful (in paperback) is very good on learning about the 4
seasonal color families and finding the right colors for the
complexion. There is also Color_for_Men.
What is the hair color and eye color for the child in question? An
"autumn" may have dark red, dark blonde, brown or black hair and eyes
of brown-green-gold hazel, brown, black, or sometimes intense
acquamarine or violet. A "spring" is lighter than an autumn although
in the same general family.
I wish I could get gold, peach, orange, and green colors for a baby.
(And please don't suggest I sew. Ahem. . .)
Laura
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910.13 | fashion police | CSSE32::RANDALL | Bonnie Randall Schutzman, CSSE/DSS | Mon May 20 1991 12:01 | 24 |
| re: .12
For babies, heck. I wish I could get those colors for MYSELF this
year! Almost all the fashion colors this year are cool brights
that make me look I've been receiving extensive chemotherapy for
the last six months.
The Gerber baby clothes have some nice greens and aquas.
re: purple
In general it's true that deep purples are usually cool colors and
bad for a yellow-toned complexion. But a purple or lavendar that
has undertones of yellow added (to intesify the color) is good for
a warm complexion, and purplish blues like periwinkle are
absolutely smashing.
re: color me beautiful
A book that made a fortune by finding a memorable, useful way to
present the artistic principles that had been around for hundreds
of years. :) :) :)
--bonnie, spring
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910.14 | Thanks and clarification- | TRACTR::MAZUR | | Mon May 20 1991 12:53 | 17 |
|
Thanks for all of the replies--and the ideas of what colors to
dress her in...I have noticed that some days the yellow in her
skin is not so noticeable--I'll have to pay closer attention to
what she is wearing on that particular day.
I'd like to clarify what I meant in my last note about my pedi
being happy with Alexa being in the 90th percentile for both
weight and height. It is the fact that at her sixth month check-up
she was 85th for weight and 50th for height that she was comparing
the 90 - 90 to. Alexa has "evened out" which means her weight is
perfect for her height--that's what made the pedi (and mom) happy.
Plus the fact that she was a premie and by looking at her now, you
would never guess all of the problems we had!!!
Sheryl
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910.15 | winter baby | JAWS::CORMIER | | Mon May 20 1991 15:18 | 10 |
| Regarding the "right" color, try it with white. For me, it's the
easiest way to determine whether the person is a cool or a warm. Clear,
bright white vs. ivory. They are also the easiest colors to find for
kids. Not the best choice, but definitely abundant : )
My son David is a "cool" baby. He has dark brown hair, bluish-white
skin, and black/brown eyes. You should see this kid in
blue-red...stunning! In green or yellow? Blech...
Sarah (winter)
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