
Autumn means vivid colors – nature’s paintbrush goes wild with reds, yellows and oranges. In tune with the season, children’s clothing is brighter than ever this fall, with classic primary colors and rich jewel tones gaining in popularity over the neons of the past few years. Read more…
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On the streets, in the schoolyards, hopping in and out of the school bus, today’s children are a dazzle of color. Winter, summer, spring and fall, their clothes are a freewheeling mix of reds and blues, pinks and yellows, green and purple, peach and turquoise, violet and lime, fuchsia and olive, orange and royal blue. Read more…
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Most recently, she became a consultant to Spain, handling promotion, in Milan, for the fashion sector of Spain’s National Institute of Foreign Trade. Read more…
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-Penney’s Extra Special line for overweight girls fits waistlines from 26 1/2 to 31 inches. Included: pastel sweaters, denim skirts and slacks. For boys, “husky” half-size shirts, sweaters and jackets are regularly stocked in the store’s The Fox Collection. Husky-size pants typically fit waistlines from 25-38 inches. Read more…
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Outfitting a clan of fashion-conscious children can be a real chore for those on a budget. Finding an outlet where you can get the best value for your dollar as well as a fashionable look can help answer this question. But where to start? In Vancouver, a good beginning is the area of Venables and Clark, where a number of factory outlets offer modestly priced children’s clothing. Read more…
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Vancouver-born artist Jane Clayton wants to change the notion that hand-painted garments are always expensive. As owner and innovator for Babes, a bright four-month-old store on Queen St. E. specializing in “fun wear,” Clayton creates colorful child-like patterns for styles including Osh Kosh overalls, Bravo play clothes and Tiger Brand sweatshirts. Read more…
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What comes to mind when you think of dressing small children at Christmas? Is it perfect little ladies in scarlet velvet dresses with French lace collars and frilly ankle socks, or in tartan wool jumpers with snow white hose and shiny black patent shoes fastened with silver buckles? Or little-men suits filled with small stiff boys, decorated with even stiffer bow ties and wearing waistcoats like Dad’s? Read more…
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Surely you can think of something more original than mini-prep for kids’ fashion gifts this Christmas. Children aren’t known for getting all excited over clothes under the Christmas tree anyway, so why make it duller by watching them open boxes full of teeny weeny oxford cloth button down shirts and itty bitty alligator crew sweaters that look like the ones next door, and down the street, and around the block? Read more…
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Baby boomers with children seek the same standards of style and comfort in their infant’s wear as they do for themselves, he says. So Budman and Green (whose wife Denyse just gave birth to their third child) decided to offer a Baby Roots line. Read more…
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Shopping for kids used to be more mundane. Slap corduroy pants and matching shirts on the boys, skirts and sweaters on the girls and you were done. But lately, babies wear Christian Dior knit jumpsuits, 4-year-olds run around in leggings and oversized shirts, and third- and fourth-graders don leather skirts and handmade sweaters for class. Read more…
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