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Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends

Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends

181a8ee3639a368000622a63472b8ab9 Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends

  • Easily portable mobile can be folded and taken anywhere you go
  • Can attach to most pack n plays and infant carriers
  • Adorable characters and soothing music will soothe baby where ever you are

Colorful on the go mobile minutes of musical play easily fits into bag for on the go Can fit most pack n plays car seats strollers and bassinetsThe TINY LOVE Take Along Mobile is a fun, colorful mobile that can travel everywhere you and your baby go. Featuring five soothing melodies and fun colors to keep your baby relaxed and entertained, the engaging mobile secures with a simple snap to most pack-and-plays, car seats, and strollers. Parents and children will enjoy the sense of familiarity the Take Along Mobile brings.

7b9c911c241572e475caed0e1bc079a1 Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends
Take Along Mobile
At a Glance:

Age/Weight Requirements:
0 months+

Assembly Requirements:
3 AA batteries (not included)

67087cf1ddd7ea8b206b585e005497c9 Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends
22cb72730b34b8ecbc551978c64f3bbc Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends

Secures with a snap to most pack-and-play sets, car seats, strollers, and bassinets.

bfc88a339318b7a6c1bcad913394b45f Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends
aa4841761c4cc6731c57c66cd5a17f2a Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends

Five soothing melodies and fun colors keep your baby relaxed and entertained.
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03c5df6ea2d71ed38aa2d85b5fedf324 Tiny Love Take Along Mobile, Animal Friends

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Colorful, Musical Mobile Stimulates and Soothes
Combining music and motion, the Take Along Mobile features a trio of soft, rotating animals: a monkey, a lion, and a hippo. The mobile has 30-minutes of music with five different melodies to choose from. This mobile quickly becomes a familiar toy and will provide a sense of continuity wherever you and your baby go.

Three-in-One Design Fits Car Seats, Strollers, and More
The Take Along Mobile secures with a simple snap to most pack-and-play sets, car seats, strollers, and bassinets. Three connectors are included, each specific to your baby’s location: a clamp for attaching to the sides of pack-and-play sets, a clip for the canopy of a stroller, and a strap for the handle of a car seat. The Take Along Mobile can also clamp or clip to most bassinets. This versatile design means you can keep your baby entertained and soothed with the mobile as you move throughout the day.

Contributes to Language and Visual Development
The Take Along Mobile’s host of sounds form musical “sentences” that stimulate your baby’s linguistic faculties. The colors, contrasting textures, and moving parts enrich babies’ visual experiences, helping them learn to focus on objects and track movement with their eyes.

About TINY LOVE: Quality Developmental Products
Trusted by parents worldwide, TINY LOVE creates toys and products for babies by pairing the latest breakthroughs in child development with quality materials and design. Each product is crafted after consultation with child development experts, quality assurance specialists, and parents. TINY LOVE is passionate about providing parents and caregivers with resources to better a child’s early development. For example, the TINY LOVE Developmental Center, a virtual space to share knowledge about child development. TINY LOVE’s 7 Elements System categorizes the specific facets of a baby’s development that is at the heart of each TINY LOVE product.

Committed to excellence, all of TINY LOVE’s products meet the standards of the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM), the Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) of the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), and the European EN-71 (CE) standards.

What’s in the Box
TINY LOVE Take Along Mobile and instruction guide



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List Price: $ 24.99

Price: $ 20.99

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Baby Einstein Take Along Tunes

Baby Einstein Take Along Tunes

6ea21c91de325cfcb0531b7e506f7229 Baby Einstein Take Along Tunes

  • Large easy press button toggles through 7 high quality classical melodies
  • Colorful lights dance across the screen to each song
  • Colorful Baby Einstein caterpillar handle is easy for little hands to hold and take anywhere
  • Off/Low/High volume switch
  • Promotes auditory development and music appreciation

Promote music appreciation by introducing your little one to baby-friendly versions of classical masterpieces by Mozart, Vivaldi, Chopin and Rossini with the Baby Einstein Takealong Tunes! A large, easy-to-press button allows your baby to toggle through 7 high quality and enjoyable classical melodies at home or on-the-go! This baby’s version of an ”MP3 player” has colorful lights that dance across the screen to enhance each entertaining melody. Imported. . 7 baby-friendly classical melodies. Volume control. The colorful and easy to grasp caterpillar handle ensures that baby can ”takealong tunes” anywhere!Melodies include:. Serenade No. 13 in G, ”Eine Kleine Nachtmusik,” K525, 1st movement, (Baby Galileo, Mozart). Nocturne No. 6, K239, 1st movement, (Baby Neptune, Mozart). Waltz in GB Op. 70, No.1 (Traveling Melodies, Chopin). The Four Seasons, Spring, 1st movement (Baby Vivaldi). William Tell Overture, ”Lone Ranger”, Rossini (Playtime Music Box). Piano Sonata in A, K331, 3rd movement (Baby Mozart). The Four Seasons, Summer, 1st and 3rd movements (Baby Vivaldi).

Rating: 4 5 Baby Einstein Take Along Tunes (out of 304 reviews)

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List Price: $ 9.99

Price: $ 7.50

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Writing Children’s Books: Take Chances To Get Published

Writing Children’s Books: Take Chances To Get Published

In an editorial several years ago, I described a tree house in the backyard of a local restaurant. I wrote, “The entire structure has been pieced together from recycled lumber, much of which still bears the paint, logos or posters of the original walls from whence it came. The generous platform is ringed by a sturdy fence that includes branches of the tree itself, random two-by-fours, wooden signs, and even a pair of moose antlers. The ‘house’ is more of a lean-to, tall enough for kids (but not adults) to stand up inside, with a screened door and two screened windows positioned so occupants can easily spy on the diners below or out over the adjacent parking lot. A green padded bench that looks like it had once belonged in a diner adequately furnishes the space. Underneath the tree house hangs a rope swing, from which kids can fling themselves into a thick layer of hay on the grass.”

Fast forward to this summer. The restaurant revamped their backyard, including the tree house. The railing now consists of uniform boards about three inches apart. The house is reached not by a ladder and trapdoor, but via a bona fide staircase. The screen door is gone, the windows are covered in glass, and several of the tree’s branches have been pruned back to discourage climbing. But the worst part, according to my 10-year-old, is that the rope swing has disappeared. Matthew declared the whole structure “boring.” In today’s world, kids have far less freedom than in previous generations. Their lives are more controlled-sometimes because of parents’ fears of an increasingly dangerous society, but often because we’ve somehow come to believe that to grow into successful adults, children’s activities must be channeled, scheduled and programmed from infancy.

Danger comes in many forms, from a stranger encountered on the way to school (who may be a neighbor out walking his dog, but you never know), to free time not filled with “enriching” activities. But, in my opinion, kids need a little danger in their lives. They need to test their boundaries, to learn how to climb a ladder and squeeze through a trapdoor. They need to hurl themselves into a pile of hay and learn it’s best not to land on your face. If grown-ups clean up their world too much, kids will never learn how to push themselves. They’ll never have the satisfaction of trying things that are a little scary, a little off their parents’ radar, and accomplishing something that belongs just to them.

One of the few places kids can still push their limits is with books. It’s possible to step outside your safe life with a story, or try new ideas on for size. But many adults want to clean up their kids’ reading choices as well. I know parents who abhor Barbara Park’s perennially popular Junie B. Jones chapter books because the spirited Junie isn’t a good role model, or won’t read Winnie the Pooh because Christopher Robin can’t spell very well. I also know a lot of authors who are afraid to write books that are slightly subversive because they worry editors won’t publish them. But for every parent who insists on only “safe” reading for their child (and it’s every parent’s right to do so), there are at least two parents who believe it’s okay for kids to wade into the danger zone through fiction. I’m not advocating murder mysteries for preschoolers here, just books that might be considered slightly uncivilized, or more entertaining than educational. Let’s look at some popular examples:

When I first saw Walter, the Farting Dog by William Kozwinkle and Glenn Murray, illustrated by Audrey Colman (a picture book whose plot needs no explanation), I was worried that children’s publishing might be sinking a little too low. But as it started winning awards and spawning sequels, I changed my opinion. Let’s face it: farting makes kids laugh. And if your child finds this book hysterical, you should be glad. In order to get the joke, kids need to know that noisy bodily functions are considered impolite. Laughing about them is one of the perks of childhood. Don’t worry, they’ll outgrow it.

A picture book coming out this December that’s already creating a buzz is 17 Things I’m Not Allowed to Do Anymore by Jenny Offill, illustrated by Nancy Carpenter. The heroine utters such statements as “I had an idea to staple my brother’s hair to his pillow. I am not allowed to use the stapler anymore.” She also glues her brother’s bunny slippers to the floor, and shows Joey Whipple her underpants. Both big No’s. This ingenious story should satisfy two camps of parents; those who want kids to see consequences for inappropriate behavior, and those who don’t mind letting their kids live vicariously through a curious, mischievous character. A pop-up book due out later this month from three publishing powerhouses-Maurice Sendak, Arthur Yorinks and Matthew Reinhart-lets young children face the monsters hiding in their closets and come out on top. In Mommy?, a young boy wanders into a haunted house looking for his mother and encounters creatures like a goblin, a mummy, and Frankenstein. Instead of running scared, the boy pulls pranks on each monster, deflating their power and showing how humor conquers fear every time.

Speaking of scary, if you haven’t read any of the enormously popular Series of Unfortunate Events middle grade novels by Lemony Snicket, do so. With titles like The Bad Beginning, The Miserable Mill, and The Penultimate Peril, and cautions from the author such as, “If you are interested in stories with happy endings, you would be better off reading some other book,” these are clearly stories where adults dare not tread. But children brave enough to venture between the covers will find hilarious plots full of nail-biting twists. The intelligent Baudelaire orphans have unusual skills (Violet for inventing, Klaus for reading and researching, and baby Sunny for biting) that make them admirable heroes.

Lauren Myracle enters the private world of teen girl talk in her young adult novels TTYL and TTFN. The titles alone might raise some parents’ suspicions because unless they’re well-versed at IM (instant messaging), they won’t know what the abbreviations stand for. In fact, the entire novels consist of conversations between three high school girls written in emails, text-messaging and IM’s, using the standard computer shorthand that includes abbreviated spelling and quirky syntax. If you’re not an IMer yourself, you’ll find the books somewhat difficult to read. But you and I aren’t the target audience here. And though the format might keep adults from examining the books too closely, the plots are standard upper young adult fare-relationships, family trauma, peer pressure, even drugs and alcohol-handled in a believable manner that conveys growth of character by the end of each story.

As an author, if you’re inspired to delve into the slightly dangerous, dark or subversive corners of childhood with your books, feel free to do so. Don’t limit yourself to all that’s bright, safe and up to code. Allow kids places where they can wander away from their parents’ watchful eyes and have an adventure. If the adventure’s in a book, they’ll always come home safe and sound. And if you’re still not convinced, consider this: In the backyard of the restaurant, the tree house now sits empty. But the books I’ve described above are flying off the shelves.

This article excerpted from Children’s Book Insider, The Newsletter for Children’s Writers. More information at http://write4kids.com