Archive for March 2010

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Chalkboard Decals: What Toddlers and Sophisticated Foodies Have in Common
Mar.24

WallCandy’s removable chalkboard decals were just endorsed by Bon Appetit magazine. But not for the dust-free taste of our special chalk!

The influential foodie publication just offered readers its Top 50 tips for “Easy Kitchen Updates” that make a dramatic impact. And our peelable, stickable chalkboards came in at #31, surrounded by trendy appliances and eco-friendly decor.

Here’s what the Bon Appetit editors wrote:

CHALK IT UP: For playfulness and practicality in one, hang a chalkboard. These are intended for kids’ rooms, but our features editor put them in his kitchen and his family uses them everyday for menu ideas, shopping lists, doodles and reminders.”

Well, there you go… another testimonial about the versatility of our chalkboard decal collection, which features traditional rectangles in addition to shapes of a Big Apple, Safari Animals (elephants, giraffes and rhinos), Circles, Royal Palace Crests (Rococo), and a School Bus (Vroom!).

The Rococo style chalkboard was recently featured on NBC’s Today Show, with host Ann Curry giving it her personal blessing.  “I’m groovin’ on that!” she said.

Sure, kids love these chalkboard decals, but they also make great conversation pieces and practical message boards in teacher’s lounges, offices and artists’ lofts.  Please let us know where you love to hang ‘em!

by: wallcandy dad

Stickerating Flashback: Did You Collect Stickers as a Kid?
Mar.15

Rainbows, teddy bears, unicorns, hearts and roses made up the core of every girl's sticker collection

My brother and I collected baseball cards when we were kids and our little sister collected stickers. She probably wondered why we hoarded dozens of the same player — we were under the delusion that they would be paying for our college tuition — and we wondered how many rainbows and unicorns were too many. I mean, heck, don’t they all look the same after a while?

Recently, my sister-in-law Kari brought all those memories flushing back when she pulled out her childhood sticker collection from the 1980s. Kari took her collecting very seriously as you can see from this official document verifying her status as a “True Sticker Lover.”

This 1983 treasure trove was sealed for posterity in one of those horrific self-stick photo albums that congeals and yellows almost instantly. Apologies for not removing the plastic sheets to improve the clarity of these scans, but I was scared of permanently damaging her collection by peeling up the pages.

The irony, of course, is deep. Why would one ever want to stick the back of the sticker to a sticky surface when one could just use the sticker itself? I suppose that would leave you with the versatility to later use the sticker when and wherever you wanted it, but this collection clearly was for display purposes only.

As a sharp contrast, I would immediately stick stickers to lunchboxes, lockers, pencil cases, doors, walls, windows, my bike and virtually any hard surface begging for decoration. I had a particular preference for Wacky Packages stickers, which came in packs with bubble gum. “Wacky Packs,” as we called them, were spoofs of consumer products. The whole notion of using “CRUST” toothpaste was a hilarious concept in my youth.

I am sure my parents and my school would have loved for there to be WallCandy removable wall stickers back when I was a kid. It would have saved them immeasurable aggravation from the chore of removing stubborn adhesives from nearly everything I touched.

Stickerating your child’s bedroom is the ultimate nostalgia trip for anyone who collected stickers or Wacky Packages back in the day. The influential parenting site Cool Mom Picks hints that decorating with WallCandy might also even help your baby get into Harvard. The logic isn’t actually that far fetched! You can read about the research behind our Smarts wall decals by clicking here.

But back to the nostalgia factor. WallCandy’s CEO Allison Krongard was addicted to stickers as a girl (surprised?) and calls her collection her “greatest treasure.”

It has yet to be rediscovered, though. Allison suspects her mother may have thrown her albums out — but holds no grudge.

“First and second grade were hot for sticker trading and going to the store to buy more was the best treat,” she says. “I remember bringing my sticker book to my friend Emily’s house for play dates.  She had the best stickers because she had a cool older sister, Sarah, who bought stickers with her babysitting money.”

Allison remembers being a huge fan of puffy stickers with googly eyes and was also enamored with Hello Kitty.

Hey, who isn’t?

For now, Allison and other grown-ups yet to be reunited with their childhood sticker collections will have to vicariously live through Kari’s.

You can never get enough cute teddies:

And no doubt, every little girl fantasized about President Ronald Reagan, in both his Oval Office and Cowboy incarnations:

How about an overdose of syrupy sweetness: Unicorns, Rainbows, Balloons, Teddies, Pandas, Hearts & Kittens all rolled into one? — YOU BETCHA!

This last glimpse of Kari’s collection illustrates three historical facts about the 1980s:

1. Children’s author Sandra Boynton (I love “Pajama Time!” and “Moo, Baa, La La La!”) apparently had a chocolate fixation with her hippos.
2. The hostile backlash against Izod alligator golf shirts apparently had lasting power.
3. Pre-rollerblade roller skates weren’t just a 1970s thing.

How about you?  Did you every collect stickers as a kid?  Do you know where your album is now?  Did you also have a childhood crush on Ronald Reagan?  Please share your sticker memories with us in the comments below!

by: wallcandy dad

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