“New kids' clothing store opens in Oviedo - Orlando Sentinel” plus 1 more |
| New kids' clothing store opens in Oviedo - Orlando Sentinel Posted: 01 Sep 2010 08:18 AM PDT os-new-store-opening-20100901 Little Bird Handmade, Consignment and More has its official grand opening today at 87 Geneva Drive in Oviedo. The children's clothing and accessories store store features handmade items by local artists with a mix of consginment clothes.There is also an assortment of new educational clothes for children. "The store is a showcase for some talented local artists as well as a place where any mom can get a unique, reasonably priced baby shower gift or some inexpensive clothes for her kids," Little Bird owner Mary Brophy said in a statement. The grand opening celebration – which will include refreshments, face painting and a visit from a clown – will go on until 6 p.m. today. This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php |
| Clutter-free with kids? Organize it, store it, live the fantasy - Oregonian Posted: 01 Sep 2010 04:58 AM PDT Published: Wednesday, September 01, 2010, 5:00 AMMany times I have walked by the rows of plastic bins at Fred Meyer or Target and been struck by my secret fantasy:My crayon-littered, clutter-filled home is transformed into a haven of color-coded bins and boxes. Stacked neatly on shelves, each bin sports a clean, typed label, marking the contents. The floor is clear of the stray building blocks and debris that normally trip me up between my mad dash from the boiling pot on the stove to the toddler in the living room trying to open the front door. Danielle Liu, a certified professional organizer (who knew there are such people?) advises that you start with this simple philosophy: Every single thing needs a home. "Every toy, every piece of clothing, every shoe, every bit of clutter needs to live somewhere," said Liu, who owns Totally Orderly LLC, a home and business organization company in West Linn, and is past president of the Oregon chapter of the National Association of Professional Organizers. Start by breaking up your house into zones. In a playroom, you might have a kitchen zone, where all the play food and kitchen toys belong; a video-gaming zone, where all the remote controls and video games are stored; a building zone for Legos, blocks, little houses and similar buildings. Label the containers -- with words or pictures if your child doesn't yet read. Labeling is important because your system of organization might not make sense to your child and helps them to buy into the whole system. Don't make it too complicated. Don't feel the need to over-sort items, she said. For instance, kids don't mind having all their blocks in one big box. They tend to dump it all together anyway. Still not sure how to tackle it? Look for ideas at your child's preschool or kindergarten class. "They've done this for years and years," Liu notes. Another key component for organization - Purge regularly. "We Americans just have too much stuff and our kids have too much stuff," she said. And a key to keeping it all together -- Maintain the space regularly. Enlist your children in keeping things orderly with a rule that your child may only have one or two toys out at a time. It keeps "toy dumping" - in which your child dumps all his or her toys out and later leaves - at bay. Hooks are great in bathrooms for towels, pajamas and robes; in playrooms for dress-up clothes, capes, halloween costurmes, hats, dresses, purses and jewelry; in mudrooms for backpacks, coats and sports bags. Shoebox-sized bins are great for small toys, Barbie shoes, Hot Wheels, little accessories. She uses them in the bathroom for hair accessories and little toiletries. She also uses a few of them inside a large dresser drawer where she divvies up socks, underwear and tights for instance into each of the bins. Open shelves. Place bins on open shelves, versus putting them inside cabinets or closets. Limit where kids' toys and possessions are allowed to be in the first place. Go lidless. Lids, like cabinet or closet doors, are "just an extra step and when you add an extra step, kids won't do it." And a note to those ready to head off to buy some bins - it's best to first do your purging and organizing before buying the bins, so that you know which kinds you need. Here are some more organizing ideas for parents and children from Simple Kids; a website, called Got Family? Get organized! that offers organizing help; and some ideas from Babble.com.
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