John Farrier's Blog Posts

Darth Vader Fairy Princess Costume



The blogger responsible for Booturtle made a fairy princess costume for her daughter and added in a bit of the dark side:

Princess Fierce brought me a broken toy crown that I took apart, painted green, added purple glitter sparkles and mounted to the mask. I redesigned the straps to the mask to be purple and green ribbon from the sides and one piece with loops across the top. Allowing me to tie a bow through the loop and basically make a net that sat on her head. She was ecsatic. The mask wasn't too tight but yet did not slip. She wore it comfortably for most of 8 hours.


The tip of her wand is shaped like a Death Star.

Link via Geekologie

How to Make a Mutant Baby Costume



Would you like for your baby to look like a deformed, three-armed mutant? Of course you would! Instructables user canida made such a costume for its* baby. Canida writes:

While we wanted to be subtle, this was almost too subtle - she wore the costume all day, and hardly anyone noticed! But when they finally detected a problem, the responses were excellent.


Link via Bits & Pieces

*user profile lists canida's gender as "robot".

92% of Toddlers Have Online Presence

I've encountered parents that purchased the web domain name for their child's name when s/he was born. This way, no cybersquatter can show up and take it. But other parents go ahead and create full social networking profiles for their children:

According to a recent international survey of 2,200 mothers, 81% of children under the age of two currently have some form of online presence — ranging from photos uploaded and shared by their parents, to a full-fledged profile on a social networking site. A full 92% of children in the U.S. have an online presence by the time they are two, compared to 73% in western Europe.


Link via Buzzfeed | Photo by Flickr user Iragerich used under Creative Commons license

Social Robot Teddy Bears



Fujitsu has developed robot teddy bears that respond to human behavior. Serkan Toto reports from a trade show that demonstrated them:

I was surprised how responsive the robots actually are. It takes just a split second to detect the presence of a human being (the bears have a sensor for that built into their nose) and after that, it’s possible for them to interact and “communicate” with humans through face recognition and constant tracking of the position of the human conversation partner.

Depending on how you behave, the bear reacts differently: it laughs, waves its paws, moves its feet etc. (the robot are hundreds of pre-programmed patterns of behavior). The bears are equipped with 12 joints, multiple touch sensors, microphones, speakers, and accelerometers.


Link

2-Year Old Knows More about Astronomy Than You Do


(Video Link)


The Rose Center at the American Museum of Natural History is holding a video contest that invites people to express how scientific discovery impacted their lives. The prize is a trip to the Rose Center in New York City. This video shows one young applicant demonstrating a remarkable knowledge of astronomy. Like Kyle VanHemert of Gizmodo says "It's like a supernova of cute."

http://www.amnh.org/rc10/ via Gizmodo

Girl Writes to Johnny Depp Asking for Help with a Mutiny, Depp Shows Up as Jack Sparrow

Beatrice Delap, 9, of Greenwich, UK, is a big fan of The Pirates of the Caribbean films. She wrote to Johnny Depp, the actor who played pirate character Captain Jack Sparrow, asking for his assistance in a mutiny at her school. Depp showed up in person as Sparrow and did so:

He made the one-off trip after nine-year-old pupil Beatrice Delap wrote to the star asking for help staging a 'mutiny' against the teachers, as he was filming at the nearby 18th century Old Naval College.[...]

The school was told just ten minutes before that Depp would be arriving and two blacked-out cars swept through the school gates.

An onlooker said she heard the most 'incredible screams of joy' as the actor, in full make-up, then entered the school.


Link via Sci Fi Wire | Photo: Cavan Pawson

Kids Will Ask the Most Uncomfortable Questions

My toddler is only now putting together very simple sentences, so I have sometime to prepare myself for the questions that kids ask that parents aren't sure how to handle.

Anyway, Uncle of the blog Say Uncle offered this story about his four-year old son, who had a question about his genitalia:

Got Junior out of the shower and then put The Second in the tub. I was sitting around when my wife walks in and says: You need to talk to your son. He has a question about his balls.

I sat there for a moment pondering what exactly a four year old could ask about his junk. And I settled on things like: What are they for? Why are they fun to play with? Why does it hurt when I get hit in them?

You know, typical ball stuff. Because, frankly, I had no idea what he was about to ask.

I walk in to the bathroom and he’s in the tub checking himself out. And I say Your mom said you had a question about your dudes?


I won't spoil the rest. But Uncle closes with this salient fact about parenting:

With kids, you mentally prepare for something, and it never goes the way you prepare for.


Link | Photo (unrelated) via Flickr user vomsorb used under Creative Commons license

Nigeria's Version of Sesame Street Will Feature a Muppet with HIV

Sesame Street is coming to Nigeria, and the producers have tailored it to meet local public health needs. To address the rising tide of HIV infection in that country, they've created a HIV-positive character:

The show stars Kami, a girl muppet who is HIV-positive, has golden hair and a zest for adventure; and Kobi, an energetic, furry, blue muppet whose troublesome escapades help others learn from his mistakes.

In a country with a population of over 150 million -- where, according to the CIA World Factbook, nearly half are under the age of 14 -- the show will address some of the biggest challenges faced by young people in the region: AIDS, malaria, gender inequality, religious differences -- as well as many positive aspects of Nigerian life. In the case of Zobi, this is characterized by an obsessive love of yams -- a staple food in the Nigerian diet.


Link via Super Punch | Photo: Sesame Workshop

7-Year Old and Father Launch Spacecraft


(Video Link)


Luke Geissbühler and his 7-year old son, Max, sent a camera attached to a balloon up into very low earth orbit:

Their so-called spacecraft was a helium-filled weather balloon rated to burst at 19-feet in diameter with a high-definition camera placed in a capsule handmade out of Styrofoam.

They attached a parachute to the payload to bring the camera safely back to Earth.


The balloon rose 19 miles into the stratosphere before rupturing, briefly experienced weightlessness, and then plummeted to the earth. It landed about 30 miles north of the launch site.

The elder Geissbühler estimates that the entire project cost just $400-500.

Link via Slashdot

Website Features Children's Lit Authors Reading Bedtime Stories


(Video Link)


A Story Before Bed is a website that allows parents with webcams to upload videos of themselves reading bedtime stories to their children, which the children can access when desired. High-resolution images of the books' pages flip across the screen to create the impression of a real mutual reading experience.

The library of available books has continued to grow, and now the site has begun featuring authors of children's books reading their own stories. This series begins wtih Oliver Chin's Baltazar and the Flying Pirates, but promises to include more.

Link | A Story Before Bed

Teenager Gets First Permanent Artificial Heart

A fifteen-year old boy in Italy needed a new heart, but was ineligible for a human heart transplant. So doctors put in a new type of artificial heart that they expect will keep him alive for 20-25 years:

Dr Amodeo said the artificial heart was around 4cm long and had been placed inside the left ventricle and its connection with the ascending aorta.

He said: "The device is an electrically activated hydraulic pump and is entirely located inside the thorax, in order to reduce the risk of infection.

"It is powered through a plug positioned behind the left ear and connected to the battery that the patient holds on a belt and is charged during the night like a mobile phone.


Link via Gizmodo | Photo by Flickr user Peter Burgin used under Creative Commons license

Mom Makes Kids Watch Home Birth

In a column at Salon, Madeline Holler shares her story about giving birth at home. She initially decided to do so in front of her young children, ages 3 and 7, so that the childbirth was a whole-family experience:

I shut out the noise, pushed through the pain and squeezed my son out the rest of the way. I reached for him while still on my knees and then turned to rest my back against the side of the tub.

Happy, relieved and a little overwhelmed, I threw my head back against the side of the pool to look at Wayne. My cheek brushed against Beatrice as she reached over to touch her brother's back. I pushed my head into her side, an armless hug, a reassuring nudge. I felt her solid body and her softness next to me.

"Can I hold him?" she asked.

After the cord was cut each sister took turns with their brother. In the meantime, we chatted, I answered the midwife's questions, remembered to actually nurse the little guy.


Link via Momlogic | Photo (unrelated) via Flickr user 3Neus used under Creative Commons license

Teenager Must Drink Own Brain Fluid to Survive

Melissa Peacock, 17, has crippling headaches because of a rare medical condition in which her body produces too much spinal fluid. To relieve pressure on her brain, doctors hooked up a tube up to drain the excess fluid directly into her stomach:

Doctors punctured her skull to drain the fluid nine times but, when the fluid returned, they decided on a more drastic operation.

‘I’ve got a lot of scars on my head from various operations – but I try to make sure my hairstyle always covers them up,’ said Melissa.

Surgeons twice tried to attach a tube from her lower spine to her stomach but both times the tubes shifted.

They then decided to insert a permanent tube directly into her brain.


Link via GearFuse | Photo: Caters

Court: Fathers Entitled to Breastfeeding Leave

A Spanish law declared that women were entitled to schedule a half hour off of work per day for the first nine months after childbirth in order to facilitate breastfeeding. When a man challenged the law as discriminatory, a European court declared that fathers are entitled to the same right:

The Spanish man who challenged the law, Pedro Manuel Roca Alvarez, said his request to take breastfeeding leave from his job in Galicia was rejected because the mother of his child was self-employed.

The top court said such a refusal could have the effect of forcing self-employed mothers to limit their work because the father cannot share the burden.


Link | Photo (unrelated) via Flickr user Lars Ploughmann used under Creative Commons license

Doctors Insulate Premature Baby with Sandwich Bag

Lexi Lacey was born premature with a birthweight of 14 ounces. Doctors gave her just a ten percent chance of survival. But she improved -- in part because of a sandwich bag that doctors are using as an insulating jacket:

Her mother Chelsea Rowberry, 17, said: ''The doctors told us they had never known a baby born as prematurely as Lexi survive.

''She was so tiny the only thing they had to keep her body temperature warm was a sandwich bag from the hospital canteen - it's incredible to think that saved her life.


Lexi is now back at home with her parents.

Link | Photo: SWNS

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Profile for John Farrier

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