Last August 16, Madonna celebrated her 50th birthday. The freakishly still-fit material girl kicked off her “Sticky & Sweet” tour to a 75,000-seater Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, Wales. Continue reading ‘Madonna’s “Sticky & Sweet” World Tour Kicks Off’
Tag 'birthday' Archive
Bring out the romantic in you! Try surprising your man with these easy to make and frugal romantic gift ideas. He’ll be glad you invested some time in making him something special!
Continue reading ‘Top 10 Most Romantic Birthday Gifts for Your Man!’
YumJimmy took me out for a fancy-pants dinner on my birthday, and I was surprised to see that they brought out a birthday dessert plate at the end of our meal. The place was too upscale for singing " which was okay for me " but it got me wondering, what do you think of special birthday treats from restaurants?
Do You Like It When Restaurants Give Birthday Treats?
I love it, I ...
My grandfather's birthday is next week and I want to surprise him by making a fun shaped cake. I've never used a cake mold before, but since they're super trendy right now, I thought it would be fun to experiment with one.
Unfortunately, I don't own a single cake mold. Can you please help me find one? Search the web for a cake mold with a creative and original shape. It should be easy to clean or dishwasher safe. Save ...
Retail. Dancing in the Streets. Happy 125th Birthday Danskin. Second City Style Fashion Blog
by on 4/04/07 at 2:23pm
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Like a million other little girls I wanted to be a ballet dancer and it was at this not-so-pivotal moment in my life that I was introduced to Danskin. But my how they've grown-- now they include yoga gear and...
You win some, you lose some. For all my mothering and motherhood skills, I suppose I have a trick or two to learn from Thrifty Mommy, though I’ve come a long way.
I’ve been trying to adhere to the Compact, as well as I can. Basically, I’m not supposed to buy anything new except medicine, food, and underwear. Glasses, I suppose. For the eyes, not the drinks. For the most part, I’ve been doing well. About a month ago, I spotted a platform bed in shambles on the street. I borrowed a friend’s car and schlepped the pieces back to my house, then spent a laborious week trying to find the right bolts to put the thing back together again. Yes, I had to buy the bolts new, but I figured such a detail was mitigated by the sheer bulk of wood and such I’d just rescued from the dump.
It’s a very pretty bed, once I glued the broken bits back together and figured out that beds made in Malaysia might need metric bolts. Never mind that I’ve got a (donated) full sized mattress on a queen sized frame. Ain’t nobody here to complain about it, just me and my boy.
Last month, I took the proceeds from the two blogs I write and treated myself to a set of three nesting tables: Danish Modern, used. That falls under the Compact, because I didn’t buy it new. And I made a new friend, who does personal shopping. If ever I own my own home, I’ll ask him to help furnish it. But those tables are the only things I’ve bought. Everything else came from family, friends, or Freecycle.
I buy all my clothes from a consignment store in my neighborhood, and the King of Everything is happy in hand-me-downs and thrift store finds. I pass his clothes on to a friend who has helped me out immensely, and to another single parent who could use a little help now and again.
In theory, I’m supposed to barter for services, but that’s just not going to work. There’s nothing my favorite hair dresser would need from me, and I don’t have the time to do any marketing or PR work for him anyway. So I pay for that haircut, and a luxury it is… massage chairs and a head massage at shampoo time, a cuppa in one hand and a good chat in the mirror as Dennis makes me something approaching teh hot. And I succumbed to the siren call of a pedicure and hey, the manicure was only $8 more!
I didn’t do too badly on the kid’s birthday, either. Friends and family bought him a few presents, no one went overboard. His father sent him some great space books, including a pop up pop out book on the space shuttle that unfolds to a four foot long extravaganza. But I gave Nico toys that friends have gifted us when we moved into our new house, toys they were recycling from their kids. Still in the box! My best score was a digital camera from Freecycle. He has been asking for a camera since Christmas, and takes a decent photo for a four year old. But I totally fell down on the job when it comes to plates, cups, napkins, and party favors. I bought them. New. And someone else made the cake.
And my guilty little secret: a couple of times a month I stop into the Caribou Coffee a block from the office to get a decent cup of coffee. But mostly, to say hello to the manager and soak in some of his incredibly kind, warm, friendly personality before I wander into my oh-so-amazing and stress-laden job.
It’s spring, a time when this mother’s thoughts turn to… birthday parties
by on 10/03/07 at 7:30pm
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The Kid’s going to be four at the end of the month, and I haven’t done a thing to get ready.
His first birthday was a blowout celebration of all and sundry, barbeque in the back yard, itty bitties eating grass, parents chatting over hamburgers, too many video cameras to count. For his second birthday, we were living abroad, and I invited all the little kids we knew, with their parents, to our villa for a garden party, complete with a catepillar cupcake and Mud for dessert.
His third birthday was low-key. Two friends, a snow park, and a hot chocolate at the cafe afterwards.
Ah, you caught me. I’m going to have to back up and explain what a catepillar cake and Mud is, aren’t I? Well, I bought a bajillion cupcakes, some white icing and some food coloring. I frosted the cupcakes in a multicolored craze, stuck red licorice in each on either side for legs, put gumballs on toothpicks for antennae, and snaked them down the center of our dining room table. I’d used books and small boxes underneath a bunched and draped cloth to create different levels on the table, and the caterpillar walked down them. Mud is a mixture of chocolate cookies, crushed and stirred into chocolate pudding. Don’t add the gummy worms til the last instant, or they begin to dissolve in the pudding and are disgusting to eat. Be warned. It looks like mud. Most of the kids at our party were too grossed out to eat it. Many of the parents were, too. But I’d bought some adorable little terra cotta plant pots from Ikea, and a very large pot for the mud, and a small hand trowel was our server. It looked adorable! And tasted great. I’m sure there’s a recipe for it, but I winged it.
We played pin the ladybug on the flower. I made a ladybug for each child, with his or her name on it, out of quarter inch colored foam, and put a piece of masking tape on it. On the wall, we’d hung big, colorful drawings of flowers, done on butcher paper with paint and crayons. The kids loved it. We also went outside and did an old-fashioned blanke toss. First, the kids put their ladybugs into the blanket and each held a piece, then shoot it about until the bugs flew out. They howled with laughter. Later on, the adults each held a piece of blanket and we tossed whatever little kid wanted to do it.
I’m stumped for his fourth birthday. He wants a pinata, but our house isn’t safe enough to have a bunch of kids over. It’s one of those way too fixer upper houses. We could go to the zoo, or to a local indoor play area if it’s open by then. We could go to a museum. We could go to the park. I just need to figure out what we’re doing… and do it. Any ideas?
At play, birthday, celebrations, ideas, mommy, mother, Mothering


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