Categories
New York City USA

New York shopping at Forever 21

Forever 21 display in Union Square store New York CityIf you’ve never hit a Forever 21 clothing store, take your teen or tween and be prepared to pick from a huge, trendy and fun selection that is well-priced. There are men’s sections in the larger stores, but it is mostly a girl’s and women’s emporium.

I ended up in one in Manhattan (the Union Square store) when I realized that I wouldn’t have time to get back to my hotel and change clothes before a TBEX (travel blogger’s conference) party. I’d heard that Forever 21 was inexpensive, but I had zero confidence that they would carry anything that would interest a 49-year-old woman who usually prefers tailored, structured clothing.

Wow, I could hardly get myself out of there.

I ended up with some jewelry and two fun tops – I tossed on the white pearl-decorated one, along with some long necklaces, and was instantly party-ready.  The chance to shop and be girly (not a luxury that I allow myself much these days) was a heck of a lot more therapeutic than I’d expected, too.

The store inventory size is often overwhelming (as are the crowds and the very busy staff) and no one is claiming high quality levels for these clothes, but for me, a $15-20 cute top when I desperately needed one made it well worth picking through the racks.

After returning from New York, I gave my teen daughter a purple sparkly Forever 21 lariat necklace as a gift, and she said, “Oh, yes, they have one of those stores down at Austin’s The Domain shopping center. They have good stuff.”

Uh, oh, right in my backyard. This may create wallet problems.  🙂

Categories
Tips USA

Christmas ornaments around the world: US Edition

As a companion to yesterday’s post on international Christmas ornaments, here are some items from our tree that hail from around the United States:

(Left photo)  The most instantly-recognizable symbol of St. Louis, Missouri is the soaring Gateway Arch, designed by Finnish architect Eero Saarinen. The city calls itself the “Gateway to the West,” a major jumping-off point for intrepid pioneers.  There’s also the excellent Museum of Westward Expansion underground beneath the Arch.

(Right photo)   Our Cinderella’s Castle ornament from Walt Disney World has been dropped a few times, so some of the little turrets are suspiciously short or missing, but it still brings back memories of visits to the Magic Kingdom when we lived in north central Florida.

(Left photo)  The Powell & Hyde cable car line in San Francisco, California.

(Right photo) The wintry charms of a little seaside town in Maine – Castine – where some of our friends used to live and where we used to visit regularly when we lived in Rhode Island.

(Left photo) This is from our trip to Virginia’s Historic Triangle of Jamestown, Yorktown and Colonial Williamsburg.

(Right photo) Some holiday greetings from my home state of Texas, with a nice gifty boot and some springtime bluebonnets to get us through the short but exciting Texas winters.

Thanks for joining me in a trip around my Christmas tree!  Happy Holidays to all of my readers….

Categories
Blog Video Posts

Video Series Part One: Inexpensive Travel Souvenirs

(This series is cross-posted with the Perceptive Travel blog.)

I envy those folks who travel but don’t have a burning desire to bring back tokens of their visits. My own home bulges with tangible reminders of the places I’ve been lucky enough to see.

The ideal travel souvenir is relatively inexpensive, evocative of its origin and (hopefully) useful in one’s daily life. It’s easy to find costly items to bring back that serve no function other than as dust collectors or to impress others, but the true traveler’s challenge is to find unique, fun mementos that bring good memories without flattening the wallet.

In the video below (Part One of a three-part video series – here’s Part Two and Part Three) I discuss a variety of ideas for inexpensive travel souvenirs that can be found just about anywhere in the world. There’s no shopping snobbery here; ideas include plastic floatie pens and medical supplies. (!)

For RSS/feed/email readers and anyone who can’t see the video box, click here for the video’s URL on YouTube.

Correction: the Hong Kong map I show is in Chinese, not Japanese (duh) and I said it was a two-part series, but it’s a three-part.

Update 15 Feb 4 pm, the video has been mysteriously “deleted,” so am working with tech support to restore it. The URL link above for YouTube DOES work. Thanks!

Update 18 Feb, now I’m going to try an embed box straight from YouTube.

Categories
Tips

My Top 10 Ideas For Travel Souvenirs

OK, I’ll admit to having quite a few T-shirts from our family travel jaunts, and my kids have a bunch as well (we’re not even going to get into the souvenir baseball cap collection.) But let’s face it, the budget and the already-stuffed suitcase can’t take too many clothing items, so what else is there for the little darlings to blow their vacation allowance on?

Here’s a proposed list to help stretch the shopping dinero:

** Floatie Pens (when tilted, objects move in the transparent barrel:) Delightfully tacky and inexpensive, these souvenir ink pens are found in some pretty unlikely places. We’ve got everything from Norwegian trolls to one from Jerusalem with floating bread and wine in front of the Last Supper. Classic.

** Key chains: You can find them everywhere, and older kids need one for their housekey anyway. I lost my favorite one from the Netherlands….little painted wooden shoes. Guess I’ll have to go back! The metal one from the Eiffel Tower brings smiles.

** Postcards: Not just blank cards; add to the adventure by taking your kids to the local post office, finding the most interesting stamps and mailing them home to yourself, their school buddies and grandparents. Scribble out some of the key addresses on some paper and carry the list with you so you don’t have to lug an address book.

** Recordings of Local Music: After everyone has checked out the cathedrals, look for sacred holiday music featuring the soaring acoustics of Notre Dame or Westminster Abbey. There are recordings of gamelan and tingklik concerts in Bali, indigenous Mayan music heard in Guatemala or perhaps some zheng music from Beijing, Shanghai or Hong Kong. There are plenty of local musicians in Hawaii who have CDs out; pick one up after the luau.

** Posters (get a tube to transport them home): Look for unique graphics that commemorate local places or festivals from your trip. We ended up with a great poster from a Japanese summer street festival in Tokyo; they were handing them out for free. Another fun thing to look for — movie posters in the local language. We have some in Japanese for Harry Potter.

** Hardware Stores: You may not know what it says but it sure looks cool; investigate hardware or home supply stores for business or household signs in the local language. No Smoking becomes Rökning Förbjuden in Swedish. I have “Please Always Keep Clean” in Thai hanging in my kitchen (not that I actually follow through on a whole lot of cleaning….)

** Drugstores: Find the most appealing colors and packaging on inexpensive everyday items like toothpaste, soap and shampoo. Ability to actually read the ingredients a plus but not required. When in doubt, another country’s version of a recognized name like Crest or Head & Shoulders will do.

** Kitchen Stuff: Refrigerator magnets, printed dish/kitchen towels, mugs and bottle openers don’t cost much and are fun, colorful travel reminders to liven up mundane chores like drying the dishes and looking in the fridge at soda options.

** Stationary store: Friends and family will enjoy hearing from you, especially when those missives have an international flavor/flavour. Thank you note-cards, gift tags, change of address announcements (“Nieuwe Woning” in Dutch) and Christmas/winter holiday cards in another language will un-blah your family’s correspondence. There’s nothing like hunting for stunning Florentine writing paper while you’re actually in Florence. Remember, lots of grandparents want an actual written thank-you note when they send gifts; email doesn’t cut it. May as well get the kids some neat writing papers to liven up those tasks.

** Subway/Metro Memorabilia: Any large city with public transportation will have these items. Bring home a system map to frame (unless the kids are sentimentally attached to their grungy crumpled one.) London’s Covent Garden has a Transport Museum gift shop; cheap thrills include a color-coded felt tip pen set (the Piccadilly Line pen is dark blue, etc.)

And here’s a tip if you are still awash in T-shirts; there are companies that will make quilts out of old T-shirts, or you can make one yourself if you’re handy.

Finally, thanks to Darren Rowse at ProBlogger for the chance to participate in his latest group blogging project….Lists!

Note: This is a 22 September 2006 re-creation of a 17 August 2006 posting that was lost in a BootsnAll server crash. I used a Google cache version, but the original comments were unfortunately lost.

Related Family Travel posts: