From the monthly archives:

June 2008

Ask Design Mom Question:
Hi Gabrielle, I’m looking for a white dress for my school age daughter. Any suggestions? xoxox, Emily W.

Design Mom Answer:
Oh. I love this question! Summer is the perfect time to shop for a white dress. I found lots of pretty options. Some are splurges. Some are over the top expensive. And some are quite reasonable.



I love this drop-waist style by Jean Bourget. And this ruffle dress from crewcuts.



Olive Juice has three pretty styles in white — and on sale too! — try here, here and here. And check out this luxe silk organza affair at Flora and Henri (pictured at top).

Some many lovely choices. It makes me long to see my girls in white all summer long.

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Neat Receipts

June 30, 2008



Do you remember seeing the Neat Receipts? It’s a little device that quickly scans and stores receipts and business cards as searchable pdfs. And then it exports the information directly into your financial software files or as expense reports. Pretty handy if you keep track of tax deductions or have a home based business. It’s the kind of tool that my order-seeking brain craves. But alas, I’ve never had the excuse to pick one up, because they’re PC-only. And I’m a mac.

So imagine my delight when I heard a version had recently become available for Mac users. Be still my heart.

We just so happen to be in the midst of overhauling and questioning how we keep our financial records. What we’ll keep on paper. What we’ll keep electronically. How we intend to back up e-files and hard copies. How often we’ll update the records. Where we’ll store information until we can input it. What we can throw away.

We don’t know exactly how our system will fall into place. We’re still experimenting. But I’m thinking Neat Receipts is a handy little tool that might help us get where we want to be.

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Stuff White People Like

June 30, 2008



Some time ago I noticed a blog listed on kirtsy called Stuff White People Like. And it was so funny. And I loved it. And I shared it here. And then I forgot about it.

And then I remembered. Because last week I received the brilliant book, based on the brilliant blog. And once again I can’t stop talking about it. I want to send a copy to everyone I know. And quote the entire contents to you in this blog post. I want to tell you to go out right. this. minute. and buy the book so you can learn about white people stuff like NPR and Oscar Parties and David Sedaris and Native Wisdom. And Cleanses. Because white people love Cleanses.

Seriously, you will love Stuff White People Like. You will belly laugh. And look for excuses to quote from the book to impress your friends. And wonder aloud at the insight, humor and genius of Christan Lander. I think it’s my new favorite hostess gift.

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Hello Again!

June 30, 2008

Nice. It feels good to be back.

And now that I’m back, the first thing I want to do is give a big thank you to Burgin for going above and beyond with the fantastic posts last week. She was amazing, right? Yay Burgin! Please come back any time.



Second, I have to tell you that in addition to having a whole week to catch up on work and house and miscellaneous and sundry (which was wonderful), we had a terrific school’s-out-summer’s-here weekend as well.
It was all about WALL-E on Friday — Ralph says it’s now his favorite Pixar flick. Grimaldi’s, ice cream and the Brooklyn Bridge on Saturday. And on Sunday I spoke to a gathering of teenagers from my church about all the cool things to do in the city this summer. Which got me totally pumped for all the cool things to do in the city this summer!

How was your weekend? Do anything fun? Of course you did! Come on, share the fun stuff.

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Well, it’s been fun kids. I want to thank Gabrielle so much for allowing me to occupy her space with my rants and raves over the last week. She is such a gracious hostess that I’m crossing all my extremities in hopes of a realio, trulio party invite one day. (Pick me! Pick me! PICK ME!)

Thank you all for the lovely comments, and those of you who skipped on over to my blogs, the door’s always open. To follow me in my quest to collect all the vintage children’s books in the world, come back and see me again at Vintage Kids’ Books My Kid Loves… or to hear me ramble on and on and on about said kid and my life here in the hottest state, come on down to Scribbling in San Antonio. Remember, Monday is the day you can win a book for free, and the rest of the week, well… that’s just filler.

Have a happy fourth gang!!!

Sighning off.

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August has driven cross country twice. Flown to New Orleans, Charleston, Seattle, New York, Santa Fe, and Indiana — some on multiple trips. Most recently, we spent a month in Mexico, getting to know the locals in San Miguel. Even at times when I’ve been home sick, lonely, travel weary, or have found a language barrier to be isolating and frustrating, it didn’t seem to matter much to him. Always resourceful, kids adapt to situations pretty easily if parents keep their cools.

I always try and make each trip engaging for him — making sure he samples the local food, he listens to the local music, and that we have plenty of books on hand so that he can get a feel for the place and its culture. If we stop longer than a moment in any spot on the globe, he’s liable to instantly make friends. He’s seen way more than I ever saw when I was three, so I know how lucky August is.

As a single mom of three on a tight budget, my mom didn’t have a ton of money to spend on vacations. Even so, by the time I was 12, I’d been up and down the east coast any number of times and hit every historical hotspot from NYC to Gettysburg. Granted, in today’s gas guzzling, $4-a-gallon era, it is not as cheap or environmentally-friendly to own the road. (My husband is trying to make up for the giant carbon footprint we left on our driving trip to Mexico by taking the bus to work four times a week.)

Even if you don’t have the time, money, and inclination to get out and show your child the world, you can at least make the next town over seem like paradise. Just north of San Antonio where we live is a little town called New Braunfels. They have a children’s museum way better than ours, a nice main street full of restaurants and shops, a wildlife park, and a snake farm! Taking August there for a day trip… I might as well be jetting him to Paris. There is something about going to a new place (even those close to home) that ignites his imagination and opens up his world view.

So no matter where you go or what you do — a cruise to Jamaica or a bus ride two towns over — get your kids moving. They’ll love you for it.

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Many of you mod-savvy moms out there will already be familiar with M. Sasek. Yet, as a blogger of vintage kids’ books, if I didn’t post on him here under the realm of kids and travel on a blog with the word design in the title, I would be remiss.

Quite possibly one of the coolest mid-century children’s books authors ever, Czech artist, illustrator, and author — Miroslav Sasek — created a series of travel-related books for tots (sort of) called “This Is”. Wonderful illustrations infused with real-life historical tips and a sharp sarcasm make these a great way to introduce your kids to new places without ever leaving your living room. Some of the titles have been reissued, but for the others, you’ll have to join the search along with the rest of us.

This is Paris (1959, reissued 2004)
This is London (1959, reissued 2004)

This is Rome (1960, reissued 2007)
This is New York (1960, reissued 2003)
This is Edinburgh (1961, reissued 2006)

This is Munich (1961)

This is Venice (1961, reissued 2005)

This is San Francisco (1962, reissued 2003)

This is Israel (1962)

This is Cape Canaveral (1963)
(Later published as This is Cape Kennedy)
This is Ireland (1964, reissued 2005)

This is Hong Kong (1965, reissued 2007)

This is Greece (1966)

This is Texas (1967, reissued 2006)

This is the United Nations (1968)

This is Washington, D.C. (1969)

This is Australia (1970)
This is Historic Britain (1974)

This drawing is of the Amarillo Livestock Auction from my son’s all time favorite — of course — This is Texas. Check out a slide show of art from the whole “This Is” series here. You won’t be disappointed.

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My husband and I enjoyed our honeymoon before the marriage — taking a sabbatical from our careers to fly round the world. I’ve always thought Social Security should fund a brief mid-life retirement so people can recharge or switch gears if they want to. Sans a government check, we worked, saved up, and loved every hard-earned minute of our new found freedom, but anywho… 16 countries and seven months later, we thought if we can come out of that close-quartered experience still loving each other, we must be doing something right.

The moment August was conceived we began planning and saving for various trips back to share our favorite spots. The safari through Tanzania he’ll take at 11, where he’ll poke his head through the sunroof of a Land Cruiser and see a lion in the wild for the first time. The summer between junior high and high school when the whole family will grab Eurail passes and explore the French countryside. Sipping coffee with August and his fiancé in Hanoi right before their wedding day. To me, saving up for these big life journeys is just as vital as a 529. We’re not loaded either, so these trips have already found their way onto my husband’s savings spreadsheet. Though I realize that’s not the dreamiest sentiment, in the long run, the payoff will be priceless.

We recently attended a friend’s wedding in New Mexico, and in lieu of a traditional registry, they registered online with Traveler’s Joy. I wish this had been around five years ago when we got hitched. Instead of registering for flatware and a china pattern (most of my friends got married over 30 and already had that kind of stuff anyway), they registered for all things honeymoon-related from plane tickets, a new camera, and matching luggage to candlelit dinners on the beach, UV-protective hoodies, and snorkel trips for two. Way more romantic than a toaster oven.

Shoot, a registry like this could work as a funnel for your child’s graduation gifts. Or for a baby shower! Or maybe you already wanna start planning a second honeymoon? Or would that be like registering for a second baby shower? Too presumptuous?

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August’s room is in a constant state of redecoration as sometimes it more closely resembles a science lab or a library than a child’s room. When not filling his walls with paintings by his grandmother or dinosaur posters out of National Geographic magazine, I am constantly on the lookout for original art and prints I think he might enjoy. I bought one of these hysterical Donald Roller Wilson knockoffs off of eBay all the way from China when he was first born, and he is still obsessed with the “crazy monkey”.

I love all things Etsy – who doesn’t really? – and in addition to the rad drawings by Rebecca Horwood I mentioned the other day, August also has this little moose ditty by Nate. One of my favorites though is a print of a painting by the amazing Austin artist Jay Long. I am madly in love with his stuff, and Jay’s silhouette paintings are unbelievable to see in person.

A few years back, I visited a friend in NYC and checked out her newly designed nursery in Brooklyn. As her husband is an architect and she’s a pretty swanky magazine editor, of course everything about it was tasteful and inspiring. The highlight of the visit was a print that seemed vaguely familiar and absolutely intriguing. I immediately researched it and discovered it as a poster called “The Land of Make Believe” — a work created by the artist Jaro Hess for the 1933 World’s Fair in Chicago. Just as its title implies, it maps everything from where Little Red Riding Hood visited grandma to Jack climbing the bean stalk.



Right away, I found a vintage copy on eBay, and wrapped it up for Lost in Texas’ daughter as a birthday gift thinking there would be an abundance of vintage copies available. Sadly, I have yet to find another, and have been too cheap to splurge on the new version. Perhaps you will not be so thrifty once you get an eyeball full of its awesomeness. (Even though Lost in Texas adores her daughter’s “Marimekko frame kit”, she, of course, made room.)


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Create an art space for your child that is permanent, varied, and always open. Pick a spot. Mount an easel. And leave all the supplies out. So what if the paint dries up because junior’s been too busy building train tracks all week. If the supplies are open and there, there is no schedule and a kid can create when the mood strikes him without having to wait for mommy or daddy to ready the spill proof cups or debag the crayons.



And speaking of crayons, I am sure these are made out of some toxic chemical that is going to peel back the ozone layer, but what’s up with Crayola’s new Twistable Slick Stix Crayons? The colors are amazing. They are almost like paint, but they are definitely crayons. Everything August draws with these is so vibrant and alive; I wanna mount them on the hood of my car for the world to see.


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ART — Art Museums Are For Babies Too! — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 26, 2008

As the daughter of a museum director dad and a painter mom, I started going to museums the moment I came out of the womb. Somewhere I read once that you shouldn’t “drag” kids into an art museum until they are older, and I think that sentiment is total baloney. My son was propped up [...]

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Music — Peter and the Wolf — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 25, 2008

Though I don’t remember exactly what version we had on LP, Peter and the Wolf had a huge impact on me when I was young. Somewhere between wanting to dance the lead role in the Nutcracker Suite and lusting after Joshua Bell, it seeped into my subconscious and took hold forever. Imagined by Russian composer [...]

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Music — Random Fun Music Picks — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 25, 2008

As Huey Lewis sang so poetically all those years ago (yes, we are that old), the heart of rock ‘n roll is still beating. As third generation lovers of that voodoo sound, it is up to us as parents to pass those musical legacies onto our own kids. Picking and choosing what pieces of the [...]

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Music — Music Together, LPs and More — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 25, 2008

Music education is as important for children as learning to read or write. It is the spiritual tonic that binds us all together, and makes it possible to communicate no matter where we are from or what language we speak. As the daughter of a pianist and a mess-arounder on the guitar myself, I started [...]

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Nature — A Few of His Favorite Things — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 24, 2008

August lives and breathes three things — books, water and animals, though not in that order. Above all else, animals are his thing. He gives every person he knows an animal alter ego. He is a duck. I am a duck. His father is a rhino. His grandmother is a camel. His girlfriend is a [...]

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Nature — Butterfly Alphabet — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 24, 2008

Though this is probably old news by now, a few years back August was gifted a Butterfly Alphabet poster by his aunt, and I still adore it. Kjell Sandved was working for the Smithsonian when he realized you could find all the letters of the alphabet hidden in the wings of the world’s butterflies. Each [...]

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Nature — Sense of Wonder — By Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 24, 2008

We all need nature, and the sooner your child learns to appreciate and love the outside world, the richer his connection will be to the people, animals, and plants that flourish around him. My parents read The Sense of Wonder by Rachel Carson right after it came out in 1965, and it forever changed how [...]

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Books — New or Old… It’s All Good — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 23, 2008

If vintage books aren’t your thing, there are a ton of great illustrators and writers creating classics now for the next generation. Author and certified readiologist — Esme Raji Codell — keeps a wonderful blog with current (and past) recommendations worthy of any child’s bookshelf. The two Aussie mums at We Heart Books do a [...]

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Books — Random Fun Picks — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 23, 2008

I find books by scouring my local hotspots and discovering titles at random, but sometimes I hear about a book that sounds so awesome… so amazing… so grand that I just have to have it right that moment or I will DIE. A friend will tell me about a great book August doesn’t possess, and [...]

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Books — Eye Heart Vintage — by Guest Mom Burgin Streetman

June 23, 2008

Before I quit work to stay home with my son and have a go at writing, I spent my early career in book selling and publishing because, quite simply, I love books. I love the smell. The cut of the cover. The guts and the mysteries they hold. So when my son August was born, [...]

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