
Princess Platter – $19.95

Are you looking for the perfect dish set for your precious little princess? You need the Princess Platter from the NeatoShop. This fantastic princess castle set includes:
Mealtime just got a whole lot more regal.
Be sure to check out the NeatoShop for more Mealtime Fun!

Dante Tyler‘s mock-up Vogue covers featuring Disney Princesses as glamazonian models is at first funny (“Thingamabobs? She’s got 20″), then a bit unsettling. With Pocahontas as a fierce Beyonce look-alike and Belle staring smoky-eyed from behind her top five novel recommendations, you have to wonder how far removed the marketing plans for Vogue and Disney really are from one another. Link -via Flavorwire
via Design You Trust

They’re oh-so-cute! There’s just something a little bit off about this photo … (Original source unknown) – via Fluff ‘n nonsense Tumblr blogs
Having written about girls’ adolescence, journalist Peggy Orenstein is quite the expert in parenting of young girls.
Her attempt in raising her daughter free of the girlie-girl stereotype, however, was nuked when – in what seems like an overnight transition – her 3-year-old daughter became enamored with being a princess.
And so began Peggy’s journey in understanding the "princess phase" – and the corporate drive to foster and cash in that phenomenon.
Orenstein takes us on a tour of the princess industrial complex, its practices as coolly calculating as its products are soft and fluffy. She describes a toy fair, held at the Javits Center in New York, at which the merchandise for girls seems to come in only one color: pink jewelry boxes, pink vanity mirrors, pink telephones, pink hair dryers, pink fur stoles. “Is all this pink really necessary?” Orenstein finally asks a sales rep.
“Only if you want to make money,” he replies.
The toy fair is one of many field trips undertaken by Orenstein in her effort to stem the frothy pink tide of princess products threatening to engulf her young daughter. The author of “Schoolgirls: Young Women, Self Esteem, and the Confidence Gap,” among other books, Orenstein is flummoxed by the intensity of the marketing blitz aimed at girls barely old enough to read the label on their Bonne Bell Lip Smackers. “I had read stacks of books devoted to girls’ adolescence,” she writes, “but where was I to turn to understand the new culture of little girls, from toddler to ‘tween,’ to help decipher the potential impact — if any — of the images and ideas they were absorbing about who they should be, what they should buy, what made them girls?”
Link | Peggy’s Book: Cinderella Ate My Daughter: Dispatches from the Front Lines of the New Girlie-Girl Culture (Photo: Clipart.com/unrelated)

The economy is so bad that even princesses have to take time from whatever it is princesses do every day and actually get a job. One Princess Amerah of Salt Lake City, Utah, got herself a sweet gig: you can rent her to host your kid’s birthday party!
Don’t let my daughter see this or I’d have to fly the Princess in for her next birthday party … Link – via J-Walk Blog
Which Disney princess are you? Just answer these 10 probing (kidding!) questions over at Brainfall to find out.
Apparently, I’m Pocahontas:
You defy convention and sometimes do what is considered taboo. Unfortunately, others do not always appreciate your differences, so it’s good that you are so strong-willed. You are loyal and you believe in fate. Your true love will find you one day.
Link – via The Zeray Gazette (Maybe they’ll do villains next, now that will be fun!)
So, which Disney Princess are you?

