Skip to main content

{This Moment}

Join the fun remembering a moment from the week.

Comments

angie said…
I love it! What a cutie. Happy weekend to you.
sylvia said…
LOL, they have their own style, haven't they? enjoy it and have a lovely weekend!
Melissa said…
Oh my goodness! What a cutie!

Here's ours:
http://melbatoast68.blogspot.com/2012/01/this-moment_20.html
Shel said…
Love this! I have pictures very much like this one of each of my girls! :)

Our moment comes from the girls playing with their best friends with the puppet theater my parents made for them for Christmas! These four littles are just perfect together and their mama (my best friend) and I watched with wonder as they created this wonderful rhythm in their play. Whoever sat in the little rocking chair was up next to put on a show! I just wish I could find the right camera setting for this low lighting!
http://ouronesweetfamily.blogspot.com/2012/01/this-moment_20.html

Have a wonderful weekend!
Sofia's Ideas said…
Love it! My 3rd born, my daughter, has a similar style. It reminds of the character "Leslie" from Bridge to Terabithia. So cute!

Our moment is a bit different this week... http://sofiasideas.com/2012/01/20/this-moment-50/

I really hope you will take a "moment" to come by! :)
Unknown said…
She is so absolutely adorable : ) What a great outfit. Happy Friday!
Laura Emily said…
she owns those glasses.
makes me wish I could pull off the same look!

my moment (and info on a giveaway!):
http://lauraemily.typepad.com/laura-emily/2012/01/-this-moment-.html
So cute! I have a photo of my daughter around the same age, and she was wearing her sunglasses in the dark to go out looking at Christmas lights. She looked like a rockstar in her carseat! :)

Here's my moment for this week: http://www.theparentvortex.com/wordpress/this-moment-7/

Popular posts from this blog

Home School Activities: Board Games We Love

My children have recently become enthralled in the world of board games. I was never a board game player. Sure, I remember long summer hours (days? it seemed like it..) spent around a Monopoly board, but I was never one to suggest to get out the cards, or a game. As my children have grown and they are now able to do activities with me, I started noticing that they really took to puzzles (when done all together) and the one or two board games I happened to have kept in the storage room. They were always asking to play Candy Land and so I figured I should branch off a bit. Over the course of the last year, I have found GREAT games, even ones that I love to play alongside them. The amount of 'teaching' they have gotten through games is jaw-dropping. Counting, team-playing, math related patterning, are just some of the skills I've watched develop. I asked before Christmas on facebook what my friends and their own kids loved and I was thrilled with the response. We have found ov

July Reads

Birch Bay Sunset, rainbow hues July has been hot out here. When you live in the top story of an apartment building, and there's no air conditioning, it can feel just over the needle of uncomfortably warm when the day is above 76 degrees. We've kept blinds shut, windows open, and a fan continually blowing as it's perched in our living room window well. Just about the only thing I feel like doing after a long day is laying on the couch straight in the fan's air circulation path, and read a good book. I had some unique picks this month. * #GIRLBOSS by Sophia Amoruso  This book was just plain fun to read. Amoruso developed the iconic ebay store NastyGal way back when vintage selling on ebay was a thing. Now she's a millionaire with a kicking website that she started from scratch and didn't owe a dime to anyone else for. It's a great 200 pager with stories on dumpster diving for daily food, entrepreneurship tips, and being the backwards kid that no one t

Top 10 Books of 2017

early sunset in Ft Langley  I love reading all these "Top 10" lists of favorite books read throughout the year, so I'm adding my two cents.  I'm involved in a Book Club that I love with women from our church, a small group that meets every week and goes through a book every few months, my own list, books I'm reading aloud to the kids and  books I'm reading for educational purposes (think professional development). I took a look at all of those combined and this is what I got, in no particular order:  *  The Problem of God  by Mark Clark - I loved going through this academic apologetic book with my friends from church. It led us to great discussion, and good food for thought. I listen to Clark's sermons every week and so knew I'd probably love his writing style, too. If you have objections to Christianity, or are feeling confused about what to believe, this is a great primer.  * You're Smarter Than You Think  by Dr. Thomas Armstron