dandelion KIDS’ shelves are filling up! Get ready for the change in seasons (can you believe that autumn is in the air and leaves are on the ground already!!??) with cool kicks from Converse, Vans and Morgan & Milo. With loads of slip-on styles, getting out the door for school will be a breeze. Toddlers can rock these styles too! Stylish hats by Goorin keep kids toasty and looking good.
Archive for September, 2009
New Products from Vans, Converse, Goorin and more…
Sunday, September 20th, 2009Puddle Jumping!
Sunday, September 13th, 2009The best thing about fall and the incessant Vancouver rain has to be the enormous puddles. We believe good clean fun should be encouraged. As long as kids are wearing rainboots, why not let them jump to their hearts delight?
For all those little puddle-jumpers who need new boots, we just received a shipment of Canadian-made Hatley rainboots in sizes 6 Toddler to 11 Youth. A sprinkling of stars covers a navy blue boot while horses gallop across a pink and brown version. Matching rain jackets in sizes 2 – 7 years are en route. Morgan & Milo rainboots are also adorable in matte brown with yellow trim or multi-coloured polkadots on a white background with pink trim. Sizes range from 7 Toddler to 2 Youth.
Links to the products on our webstore:
MM brn boot http://shop.dandelionkids.ca/mm-mb7020.html
(http://shop NULL.dandelionkids NULL.ca/mm-mb7020 NULL.html)polka dot http://shop.dandelionkids.ca/mm-mg7010.html (http://shop NULL.dandelionkids NULL.ca/mm-mg7010 NULL.html)
Hooray Hooray! Collage Collage!
Wednesday, September 9th, 2009
We are so pleased that our lovely friend Erin has realized her dream! Her new retail shop and workshop space, Collage Collage (http://www NULL.collagecollage NULL.ca), opening on Saturday, September 12 (Join the party from 1-4 in the afternoon!) in East Vancouver, is light-filled and airy. A perfect space for everyone who would like to engage with the arts, find inspiration and explore contemporary works through workshops and classes. A long wooden table dominates the space, inviting creativity and collaboration. It is a place to find some art supplies, a story book, a small sculpture or a new pair of scissors – and that hardest to find of necessary art items – a good pencil sharpener!
We have had the pleasure of having Erin lead a Halloween-based craft workshop at dandelion KIDS that was enjoyed by all, the results of which made up one of our most beautiful and spooky window displays! And long ago, when he was in preschool, Stefanie’s son Jasper, was seriously enamored of Erin after she led several art classes. Her education in the fine arts and her gentle approach will ensure that participants of her workshops will be inspired to create and learn, over and over again.
We can’t wait to sign up!
Collage Collage
621 Kingsway (at 15th + Fraser)
604.323.3746
info@collagecollage.ca (info null@null collagecollage NULL.ca)
This is how I shop…
Saturday, September 5th, 2009
Yay! Annemarie from yoyomama.ca (http://www NULL.yoyomama NULL.ca) has written our first guest blog! Read on for her reflections on styles past and meaningful shopping.
The media (yoyomama included) has been full of articles on back to school fashions and style and all the things your child will need as they venture forth into a new year of preschool, kindergarten or beyond. I remember how I used to love choosing my back to school “outfit”, though I shudder now when I think of what I thought was styling. Pink jeans, ruffled neck nylon blouses, clompy wooden clogs. But for as long as possible I plan to pick my kids’ clothes on my own, because what a three-year-old princess-in-training thinks is appropriate for pre school isn’t necessarily what I think is appropriate. I’ve accepted that you have to give up a lot of control when you become a parent, so it makes me feel better to exert mine wherever I can.
The expectation these days seems to be that you’ll kit your kid out from tip to toe, just because the seasons are changing and school is starting, but that’s just not how I shop. I don’t hit one store at the mall and work my way from underwear on outwards, instead as the seasons change I go through the girls’ drawers and sort them into piles of too small, consign, save for next winter etc.
Then I refill the drawers with what we’ve got stored for fall ’09 for example, and then I spot the gaps and go out looking to fill them. It’s exhausting.
And it also means their wardrobes can be a bit haphazard with highlights and lowlights. I seem to fall down when it comes to finding good socks, tights and leggings to match the lovely dresses I have no problems spotting. But it also means their clothes tend to be more interesting (to me anyhow) and often have a story. Things along the lines of “That’s the organic cotton dress I got for $10 at that sample sale.” Or “When I bought this dress for M for fall, Stefanie at dandelion KIDS said her daughter L had the same dress.” True story and luckily L and M don’t go to the same school. Or “That’s the skirt her grandma sent back from England from a fair trade collective.” And I like it better that way, even though it may not be as organized or as matchy matchy. Which could be the whole root of the socks, tights and leggings problem.















