Artful Ideas To Create A Memorable Baby Shower

Posted

You can receive Featurettes by e-mail daily, weekly or monthly by request. We can e-mail by your choice of topic or all stories as you may prefer. To make it even more convenient for editors to use our stories, NAPS has added an RSS syndication feed to our Web site. Simply hit the RSS button on our site for automated updates on available content. Please contact us to arrange to receive Featurettes in the format that works best for you at (800) 222-5551 or e-mail your request to us at printmedia@napsnet.com. We can provide Featurettes on CD-ROM or you can download it online at www.napsnet.com. Gary Lipton Media Relations Manager Phone: 1-(800)-222-5551 Fax: 1-(800)-990-4329 Web site: www. napsnet .com e-mail: printmedia@napsnet.com #2471 North American Precis Syndicate, Inc., 350 Fifth Avenue, 65th Floor, New York, N.Y. 10118-0110 Artful Ideas To Create A Memorable Baby Shower (NAPSA)—A baby shower is a rite of passage and a time to provide the mom-to-be with the tools and knowledge that will serve her in the coming months. It’s also time to gather family and friends for a party that promises laughter, joy, advice and the essential musthaves for welcoming a little miracle into the world. Sandra Magsamen, author of Ceramic Piggy “Living Artfully” Banks and creator of the Messages from the heart brand, available at JCPenney, shares her ideas on how to be creative when throwing a baby shower as well as gift giving. • Instead of using a storebought invite, be creative by using a baby picture of the mom-to-be on the cover. Invites can read: “This little baby is all grown up and having a baby of her own!”. • If you want your invite to really stand out, send inexpensive plastic baby bottles to your guests with the invite inside. This can read: “Join us for a drink to shower (Name) and her new baby with lots of love.” •At the shower, have your guests bring baby pictures of themselves. Pass around the photos and see which guests can match the person at the shower with the baby picture. Whoever gets the most right is the winner. •Create a “Messages from the Heart Tree.” Ask guests to write a message they wish to share with the new baby and the mom-to-be on a painted wooden plaque found at craft stores. Hang them with ribbon from the tree branches to create a beautiful centerpiece. After the shower, the mom can use these beauties to decorate the nursery. • Decorate with flowers and flair. Use piggy banks as vases and baby bottles, too. Create a bouquet boutique and give all guests a beautiful bouquet as they leave the shower. Gift giving can be challenging when it comes to baby showers, so being creative is key. The mom-tobe should register online to let everyone know her needs. Here are a few ideas: • Create an advice book for raising a new baby. Ask friends and family alike to jot down a piece of wisdom—good advice for raising a healthy, happy child. Paste them into a book with a pretty cover. •Buy a gift for which the packaging can be used again, such as the Messages from the Heart Flowers in a Bucket, where a baby T-shirt, socks, hat and bib are packaged in tiny Flowers in a pink or blue tins Bucket that say “a bunch of good wishes.” These tins can then be reused as toy pails or storage for toys. •Make a coupon book with special offers—good for one night of babysitting, good for one homecooked dinner a month for a year, good for one day shopping with a friend or good for a night out on the town. •Have fun with dress-up time in an adorable infant costume: lions, tigers and bears or a gentle ladybug costume that will give playtime a whole new spin and provide the best photo op. Please visit Sandra Magsamen at www.sandramagsamen.com. For more gift ideas, visit www.jcp.com or consult its baby gift registry. Five Environmental Questions Never Asked (NAPSA)—Simple “green” living ideas are everywhere—from billboards to T-shirts—but there are less common, yet equally important, environmental issues. 1. What is the impact of composting? Composting, the process of converting organic materials into soil, is a simple way to reduce garbage by one-third and preserve living organisms. According to Com posters.com, compostable waste makes up 30 percent of garbage in the United States. In 1999, the EPA recorded that 64 million tons of materials were saved from landfills by composting and recycling. Now, just think how much waste can be saved if composting becomes as common as recycling. Web sites such as Compost.org provide easy-to-use home-composting guides. Did you know tea bags, coffee grounds and corn husks can be composted? 2. Can print cartridges be recycled? Yes. In fact, many manufacturers offer print cartridge recycling free of charge. For example, HP offers free recycling for its ink and toner cartridges through the HP Planet Partners program and makes sure all HP cartridges returned through Planet Partners are recycled and diverted from landfills. Many companies that refill or remanufacture print cartridges are private and not required to disclose end-of-life recycling processes. A Gartner Research study stated: “While the use of remanufactured supplies can reduce initial acquisition costs and prevent cartridges [from] going to landfills, organizations must understand that many HP print cartridges being un loaded for recycling. remanufacturers do not have proper disposal practices, and their efforts may not be environmentally sound.” No matter where you buy print cartridges, be sure to research the company’s recycling policies and standards. 3. Paper or Plastic? Many people know that plastic is harmful to the environment. Recently, the city of San Francisco implemented a ban on using nonrecyclable plastic bags in grocery stores, saving nearly 5 million bags a month from landfills. Plastic bags are not the only villain; paper bags require more than double the amount of energy to manufacture and transport than plastic bags, according to the Environmental Literacy Council. The trend is catching on, and cities across the nation, such as Seattle, are working towards “green” fees for disposable bags and encouraging the use of reusable bags in grocery stores. 4. Is it important to purchase organic cleaners? Harmful pollutants in cleaners put people at risk in their homes and negatively effect water and air quality. Organic cleaners have less toxicity, low volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and are biodegradable. According to the EPA, cleaners with high VOC content contribute to smog formation. Ingredients containing phosphorus or nitrogen evaporate into the air and pollute bodies of water, affecting numerous wildlife species. It’s important to think about organic cleaners when cleaning a home but also when searching for professional cleaning services such as housekeepers, car detailing and dry cleaning. 5. How do I know what can be recycled? Understanding what can and cannot be recycled is a significant step toward helping the environment. Many people spend 40 hours a week sitting at a desk, where throwing away paper becomes habitual. Sticky notes can be recycled; tissues cannot. Food wrappers or soiled products cannot be recycled. Magazines, soda cans, juice bottles (both plastic and glass) and even most lotion bottles can be recycled. You may be surprised what can be recycled, even things without a recycle symbol can sometimes be recycled, such as dry cleaning wire hangers and worn-out tennis shoes. Web sites such as World.org provide simple recycling-education tools. Keep a “recycle only” container at your desk for one month. You may be surprised at how many workplace items are recyclable. You can learn more online at EPA.gov and Compost.org.