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Feb
07
2012

posted by

Carly Hagins


Sweet Treats

There’s nothing quite like Valentine’s Day in grade school. Friends exchange small gifts and there are classroom parties with festive decorations. One of the first holidays since late December, it’s an excuse to let people know you care. And maybe eat a candy heart or five.

The B.ig day is only a week away. Are you still searching for creative ideas about what your wee ones can bring to school on February 14? If so, you’re in luck! We’ve combed the internet to come up with these suggestions just for you.

For many, Valentine’s Day is all about candy. The options are endless: there are heart-shaped boxes full of chocolate, lollipops wrapped in red, and conversation hearts printed with sweet sayings.

  • Personalized matchboxes from inchmark are adorable—and hold a perfectly petite portion of your favorite sweet treat.
  • Gabrielle Blair, better known as Design Mom, always has ingenious Valentine’s ideas. We’re blown away by these portraits-turned-lollipop-holders. (Bet they’d work with pencils too!)
  • These See-Through Valentines (made by Kelli Wilson) are elegant enough to bring to a big kid’s party—or gift to your sweetheart.

Maybe you prefer to think outside the (candy) box? Lots of schools have started enforcing sugar-free celebrations. We love the idea of Valentines that last a little longer than a candy stash.

  • Mer Mag’s color theory cards make our designer hearts sing. We’re considering making a set for every holiday this year.
  • Simply wrapped, bouncy balls become a unique and very boy-friendly treat. Thanks to Super Mom Moments for the super idea.
  • These beautiful painted rocks from Aesthetic Outburst are a fun craft and a sweet memento. There’s no better way to say ‘you rock!’
  • Do you have a drawer full of crayon nubs? Cottoncandycastle’s heart-shaped mishmash crayons look soooo cool, are fun to use, and can teach a valuable lesson in recycling.
  • Little ones will feel like the head zookeeper with these wild cards from Design Mom. Don’t miss the free printable!
  • Food coloring and shaving cream come together to make these awesomely crafty cards from Modern Parents Messy Kids. Our recommendation? Put the kids on shaving cream duty, keep the food coloring in adult hands, and have a camera close by!

Valentine’s Day can also be the perfect time to teach your little ones about the importance of helping others. What better way to show your compassion than by providing opportunities to people who might not have them otherwise?

  • Me to We has many Artisan-made gifts that would be just right to give to your loved ones. Our favorite? The mood elevator!
  • Bee mine? A gift of honey bees via Free The Children can be life changing for families in need. If you ask us, that’s sweeter than any box of chocolates.

And if you’re looking for a gift for the loved ones in your life who have graduated from the days of pencil cases and milk in mini cartons, we suggest sharing the wisdom of your wee ones with our online quote maker. Quotes can be downloaded, emailed, tweeted, printed, and framed. The incredible insight of the most precious little people in your life is truly one of the greatest gifts around.

—Carly

PS- This year I’m sending Valentines from tattly—makers of awesomely design-y temporary tattoos—to my friends near and far. You’re never too old for a little treat!


Jan
27
2012

posted by

Andrea Gavin Becker


The Perfect Valentine's Day Gift: the words of a child

While it can seem impossible to find a Valentine’s Day gift that truly imparts the love, joy and gratitude you want to share with that special person, we think it can be easy and (almost) free.

Those brilliant, hilarious, poignant and priceless things children say can be turned into a gorgeous keepsake to be treasured forever using the B. Quote Gallery quote maker. Here's what I did:

First, I chose a quote by my nephew I know my sister is going to love. Then I entered it into the the Quote Maker which automatically turned it into beautiful art (ready for gifting to moms, dads, grandparents, aunts, uncles, babysitters and teachers).

Once I created my quote, I downloaded it to print. (You can also click on the envelope to email it, creating a personalized e-Valentine.) When it was printed, I added a few personal touches to turn it into a gorgeous valentine.

Here are a few step-by-step instructions to create heart art for Valentine's Day:

  1. For each card, print a quote on matte card stock paper at your desired size. For the simplest of quotes, size them to fit in envelopes you have purchased at a stationery store or online. You can go super tiny or ultra big. Anything goes! Some of my favorite ideas are brown kraft envelopes or glassine envelopes you can find a photography supply stores.
  2. Round the corners of the valentine with scissors, and then have your wee one sign the valentine if you like. Finally, decorate the envelope with hearts, doodles and love. One of my favorite things to do was to make hearts with a heart hole punch out of scraps of the quotes. I also found stickers and metallic pens added to the fun.
  3. For a fold-over card, I simply printed 2 quotes and used glue tape to stick them together back to back. Fold over and voilà!
  4. For that extra special someone, try printing several quotes and using tiny clothespins and baker's twine to make a string-a-long anyone would love.
  5. Finally, if you want to go bigger, you can download the quote then send it to Shutterfly.com, Kodak.com, Mpix.com or Vistaprint.com to make a wonderful keepsake—a book, a bag, a calendar. You can use these quotes any way you would use a photo.

The most important thing to remember that it really truly is the thought that counts! Even a printout of a quote just folded in half would make anyone's day.

Happy Valentine's Day card making!

—Andrea



Nov
04
2011

posted by

Gisela Voss


UnB.elievable

This is so freakin' cute and a first for us.

Never ever, in our wildest dreams, could we have imagined that a mom would turn her little girl into a toy we designed.

Crystal, crafty creator at Little Free Radical, made an adorable Poppitoppy costume for her little girl. And in so doing made a team of worker B.'s super-duper happy.

We have drooled puddles, squealed concerts, and broken the refresh button to see these pictures a hundred times. Is this what Walt must have felt like when he saw the first human dressed as Mickey?

Our hearts sing. We want to hug our computers. And the goodness of B. continues to flow.

We thank you all for your part in its sweetness.

— Gisela 


Oct
26
2011

posted by

Gisela Voss


Shake it up, Crazy. Twist and howl.

Gotta be a little bit crazy to create toys. Howling at the moon helps.

My daughter caught me with her iPhone one of the many, many late nights I was on conference call with our awesome sound studio describing to Jeff Hook, our über-talented recording artist, the spirit I wanted to create for our Woofer hound dog guitar. He got it juuuust right!

Ready to rock, arriving in stores right now. Join me for a midnight jam session?
Who says toys are just for kids?

-Gisela


Oct
03
2011

posted by

Gisela Voss


Me to We

How do we teach our children something as BIG as generosity?

We hold the opportunity of a lifetime in our hands. Literally. The formation of a little human being is our legacy, our gift to the world. Who our children become happens in the daily decisions, in the fleeting moments of everyday life—from using cloth napkins, to sharing favorite toys, to holding a door open for someone, or picking up trash at the beach. These are the life lessons that mold our little ones into the people they are going to be. There, when we least expect it, by our example, by the choices we make, they learn to B. Good.

"Good." That short word seems so vacuous. And yet what do we all want our kids to be?

HONEST
KIND
FAIR
HAPPY
GOOD

What toys they play with make a difference. That's why we try to infuse goodness into ALL the product decisions we make. We truly strive every single day to B. good. To kids—all kids—their parents, and our world.

And that is why we are deeply humbled, every day, by the work Free The Children does around the world. Their holistic Adopt-a-Village model is proof, as Craig Kielburger says, that: "the greatest gift is to help someone never need charity again."

And that is why we are honored, every day, that you invite our toys into your homes and into the hands of the most precious little people in your lives. It's a privilege we don't take lightly. And it's a decision you are making at the store that makes a little difference every time. You, yes YOU, are helping Free The Children too.

This week I took my daughter and some of her friends to WE DAY, an incredible sight to behold. 60,000 teens joined together in a can-do spirit to make a difference in their world, in our world, locally and globally.

THIS is the reason we chose Free The Children to receive a small donation from every B. toy sold. Of course because of their international success building 650+ schools and opening clinics and water wells. But, more importantly, because as a company of products for kids, as parents of kids, we were deeply moved by the Free The Children's other mission: the understanding that by awakening the spirit of activism in young people, anything is possible—injustices can be stopped, our local and global communities can be transformed for the better, and hope for the future can be sustained.

The world needs our kids to pitch in and make our world a better place for all kids. To open their hearts from "mine" and "me me me" to a spirit of WE.

Join me in taking our kids there?
You already have.

-Gisela