Where can you get those cheap plastic sunglasses? Party Stores?
[2009-08-01 15:20:29]

Q: the ones that are like Wayfarers except they are the cheap kid kind. I usually like the cheap ones beat. I know they have them at places like Hot Topic and Wet Seal but those arent the really cheap ones.

OR do you know a website that can

A: Party city

Fashion & Accessories »

where can I buy those cheap plastic sunglasses with the colored sides?
[2009-11-18 12:57:01]
L1050889

they look like these:: http://modculture.typepad.com/photos/unc ategorized/2007/06/12/keep_sunglasses.jp g

ive tried a few dollar stores and a party store


try here:
http://www.superfashionzone.com/product/ category/Sunglasses-0-0-43-1.html

Help with 9 year old beauty spa birthday party ideas?

Http://www.buzzle.com/articles/homemade-face-masks-facial-mask-recipes.html

Be sure to have cucumber slices for them to put on their eyes, for fun.

Obviously, you won’t be expert to give true manis and pedis, but you can of course paint their fingers and toes. Either use the colors you have at home, or let you daughter help pick out some new colors. Maybe you could pick up some nail pens as well, this allows you to make designs on nails with ease. Or nail stickers would work.

After facials, do makeup. Of course, most nine year olds don’t wear makeup yet, so do it subtle. This way the parents won’t freak, but the girls get to have fun. Have assorted light pinks/tans/browns for eyeshadow, a brown mascara, a light pink redden, and light pink and clear glosses. To prevent infections, buy disposable applicators (Walgreens, Walmart, etc.). Pertain it all lightly, especially mascara.

After their nails, makeup, and facials are done, do their hair. Make sure to have clips and pony holders that they can take home, so they don’t have to undo their hair. Do things like curls, low ponys, high ponys, side ponys, bang poofs, etc.

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Time to give the kitchen a clean sweep

Is your post-holiday kitchen decorated with a trail of cookie crumbs and out of kilter candy canes?</p><p> Is your refrigerator filled with the aging remains of New Year's Eve party food, molding cheese and ham that's well into its second curing?</p><p> You aren't alone in your mess. With cooking, baking and entertaining, our kitchens tend to take a beating over the holidays.</p><p> But just like taking down the Christmas tree, making an annual ritual of organizing the kitchen is a good January resolution.</p><p> Tallmadge, Ohio, resident Marcia Cianchetti pointed to her kitchen table covered with the remains of the holidays - containers of candied cherries for fruitcakes she never baked, a bread machine her daughter dragged out of storage to take back with her to college, a food-filled basket her husband received as a Christmas gift, an empty tin from cookies a neighbor sent over, newspapers, dishes, presents and more.</p><p> Because her family eats in the dining room, the kitchen table and its nook off the back of the room have become a quasi-storage compass and dumping ground for her family's stuff.</p><p> "Honestly, I just have too much stuff. Thirty-one years ago, I had half the cupboard space I have now and I had plenty of room. Now, I have twice the space and I still don't have room for everything," she said.</p><p> The 58-year-old retired baker said the holidays are particularly challenging because of all of the new items that came into the house as gifts, and because her youngest daughter was home from college and she wanted to make sure the refrigerator was well-stocked with her favorites.</p><p> Now the amount of food left over was making Cianchetti nervous.</p><p> Professional organizer Jamie Escola, of Calm and Collected Organizing of Canton, Ohio, said Cianchetti's situation is typical. "It's human nature. If we have the space, we will fill it up," she said.</p><p> Escola gave a walk-through of Cianchetti's kitchen to offer tips on how to get a kitchen organized and keep it that way.</p><p> She likes to practice a technique known as SPACE, created by organizer Julie Morgenstern:</p><p> S - Sort through your stuff.</p><p> P - Purge anything that is expired, split or unused.</p><p> A - Assign everything a home.</p><p> C - Containerize your items.</p><p> E - Equalize your space.</p><p> In Cianchetti's case, her kitchen offers broad storage - two large pantry cupboards (one for food and one for equipment) and a generous number of cupboards to hold dishes, glasses and other items. All of them are filled.</p><p> Escola said to open by sorting all of it and purging.</p><p> For food in the pantry, refrigerator and freezer, get rid of expired packages, stale items or food that you know won't be eaten. Particularly at the holidays, when food gifts are common, we tend to end up with food that we may not indeed use. If you know a bottle of exotic vinegar is not something you will open, don't be jumpy to donate it to a food pantry or give it to a friend who will. Otherwise, it will probably get shoved to the back of the cupboard, where it will be forgotten until it expires and eventually is thrown out anyway.</p><p> Escola advised Cianchetti to edit out about 25 percent of what was in her pantries. For cookware, that means examining what she has and eliminating items she doesn't use. For items that are seldom used, like holiday platters, Escola recommended storing them in the basement or somewhere off site, where they aren't taking up space the whole year.</p><p> "Make sure the things in the kitchen are things you are using at least once or twice a week," she said.</p><p> But deciding what to keep and what to get rid of can be difficult.</p><p> </p><p> Cianchetti looked at her husband's gift basket, and wondered after the food was put away, was the basket something to save or get rid of? The same for the empty cookie tin.</p><p> </p><p> Escola said saving items like baskets or tins isn't always a bad idea, because it does cost to replace them and most of us may need one from time to time. But you can't realistically save all of them. She suggested setting a small number to keep - no more than five - to be stored in the basement. "That way, you'll have one on hand if you want to make a gift basket for someone else," Escola said. But when basket No. 6 enters the house, it's time to get rid of one.</p><p> When it comes to storing off site in the basement or garage, Escola said again it is important to set a limit; otherwise you will fill up the basement. Set apart three basement shelves for kitchen overflow. When that space is filled, it's time to purge again, she said.</p><p> Sometimes, Escola said, you just have to give yourself permission to get rid of things and donating is always a good option.</p><p> "Ask yourself, 'Is it something I really need or that adds to the enjoyment of my kitchen?' If it does, you need to create a home for it. It's basically about weighing the positives and the negatives and about letting go. ... If it does not have a purposeful and obvious home, those things are going to become clutter," Escola said.</p><p> Assigning everything a home is the next step, and is crucial to getting and staying organized. If you always put coupons and receipts in the same place, then you'll always know where to look for them when you need them, Escola said. The space doesn't have to be a perfectly organized file. It can be just a box, basket or drawer. But as long as you use it for paper and only paper, you'll always know where to find items and you'll escape paper clutter taking over your countertops.</p><p> The time to buy plastic bins, containers and other organizers is after you have given everything a home, so that you will buy the right container for the job. "Resist the temptation to go out and purchase new containers, products and organizing tools, because then you have to organize around them. Take stock of what you have first," Escola said.</p><p> She is a big fan of baskets or plastic bins for holding like items - for example, bags of nuts and baking morsels. They keep supplies together, and can be pulled in and out, essentially creating drawers on shelves.</p><p> The final step, equalizing, is about maintaining the new order.</p><p> </p><p> When she examined her cupboards, Cianchetti discovered that she had four bags of marshmallows, and didn't even remember buying them.</p><p> </p><p> Eliminating the multiples is a great way to create space and will help to stop food waste, too.</p><p> Before going grocery shopping, Escola said, "Shop your pantry first." If you have three bags of rice, then plan some meals using rice to help pare it down. Knowing that you have three bags at home already also should stop you from bringing home a fourth.</p><p> Now that you have a plan, getting started can be the hardest part.</p><p> "I was thinking, if I just did an hour a day, then maybe I would get into it and maybe that would turn into two hours and I might truly get somewhere," Cianchetti said.</p><p> Escola recommends starting with all flat surfaces first - counters, islands and tabletops. Eliminating the visual clutter will immediately transform the kitchen's arrival, and it will give you space to work when you want to tackle what's inside the cupboards and drawers.</p><p> Countertops are a constant trouble spot, but they also can be an indication of what a kitchen is lacking. If your counter is cluttered with keys, mail, sunglasses and everyone's cell-phone charger, it's probably because there isn't an assigned spot for those items.</p><p> </p><p> Professional organizer Beverly Coggins, who ran her corporation, 1-2-3 ... Get Organized, from her home in Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, before recently relocating to Montana, said it is important to create functional areas within a kitchen.</p><p> Hooks by the door for keys work well, and so does a basket for important items like school papers that need to be signed and party invitations that need replies. "If you keep it all in one place, then you aren't screaming around the place to try and find things," she said.</p><p> In a similar manner, store baking equipment near the oven, knives and cutting boards near the sink, and dishes, glassware and silverware near the table or dishwasher, Coggins said. "Mostly, you want to put those things together that make sense. The coffee maker, coffee, sugar and tea, store all of that in one neighbourhood," she said.</p><p> The idea is to create spaces where everything you need for a particular task is organized in a single space.</p><p> </p><p> Coggins said one of the most outstanding ways to deal with maintenance is to make it a part of your daily routine.</p><p> "At the end of the day, make sure things are cleared off kitchen counters," she said.

Other - Holidays »

Help! Birthday Party in July!?
[2007-06-27 13:52:25]
L1050891

There are going to be 14 girls about age 12-14. Its a pool party with lots of games and relay races. There are going to be 10 games, which I have to get prizes for. The only problem is what prizes should I get?

I am also giving away little


Colourful fancy T-shirts, accessories like ear-rings and bangles, cute mugs for everyone to remember will be good ideas too!

Honolulu »

Need luau party help for my sweet 16 this summer.!?
[2009-04-04 05:40:32]
55210008

hey! i'm having a sweet 16 luau party. very hawaiian/tropical theme. i need party ideas! fast! please help.

about my party:
this will take place early august in nj. it will be in my backyard with about 20 people. where we live about


u should also get SHAVED ICE! its a GREAT hawaiian dessert, sorta like a slushie, but wayy advance. and also banana bread is a great hawaiian food. ;) and u could give out coconut candy, its really popular in hawaii. and hawaiian punch isnt really hawaiian

plastic party sunglasses - News
Mad Hatter, rabbits, queens help Maggie celebrate 'Alice in Wonderland' birthday
By Karen Hibdon Santa Susana High School drama student Maggie Johnson (center) dances with her friends dressed as "Alice" from "Alice in Wonderland" during her 16th birthday party at her home in Simi Valley. Johnson, who loves "Alice in Wonderland"

Gearing up for a trip to sea on a party boat
BECAUSE OF THE price of motor boat fuel and the tough conditions at sea this time of year, more and more saltwater anglers will be turning to party knockabout fishing when it comes to their quest for groundfish. The first requirement that is obvious for an early

Catlike Fusion Super Wing eyewear
This means you can easily stab yourself in the eye with the ends of the frames. To double check this I gave these to a third party to try. Without mentioning my problems with the sunglasses he diagnosed exactly the same troubles within seconds.