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AppCrayon $9.99

AppCrayon

The AppCrayon Stylus for Kids is the perfect compliment to your iPad, iPhone, iPod Touch, Galaxy Tab, Xoom, and more! It is made in the USA and features: A gentle rubber tip that works with most mobile touchscreen devices Ergonomically shaped training grip to help kids hold it correctly 5 ...
BugBite $6.00

BugBite

The BugBite is a revolutionary, made in the USA teether that combines style, functionality, and design into a perfect little bite for your bug! Featuring: A single ring that swivels in and out of a hard plastic case. Case can be opened for cleaning. Loop for attaching to a lanyard, carabin...
Circus Teethers $12.00

Circus Teethers

DANO's Circus Teethers are made in the USA with the same medical grade materials that pediatricians and dentists trust for use in their equipment. Each set contains three variable-sized rings (Monkey, Seal, and Lion). 3 textures, colors, and sizes to allow babies options for what f...
DANO Ducki $9.00

DANO Ducki

The DANO Ducki is a unique teether and bath toy that is made in the USA. It features: PVC-free, FDA-compliant medical grade materials. Also BPA- and Phthalate-free. A hatch on the bottom that opens for cleaning and to allow it to air out at the end of each bath. 2 teething surfaces: the ta...

A Beautiful DayMay 27, 2011

I fly because it releases my mind from the tyranny of petty things.

~Antoine de Saint-Exupery

There are very few days better than my yesterday. Not only was San Diego classy with its perfect spring-y 75 degrees, but I had the privilege of doing “research and development” on our latest product line. That means that I twirled on a grassy knoll with my beautiful niece as we both grasped small planes -she held Amelia, and I flew Ace. We had to get our wiggles out before we landed the planes on their landing strips. We rushed into the classroom, found the runway that was the letter “a” and practiced our graceful descents into alphabet heaven.

As an “expert” educator with a master’s degree in education, I’ve attempted to teach her in the past, but she has the attention span of a two-year-old! Of course, her distractibility does not bother me since she is two, after all, but sitting still is not one of her many talents, and has made my lessons in the past difficult. She’s an explorer, a do-er; she is her father and her mother’s daughter, and I love her. In all of her sticky-fingered, movie line quoting, distractible glory, she is, perhaps, the most perfect person I’ve ever met, and today I taught her how to write the letter “a”.


In a world that often seems ruled by incredibly powerful boxes with wires, it was a beautiful thing to incorporate twirling in the sun into my niece’s educational plan. I hope that all of you wonderful readers out there know that I’m taking my work seriously and, while I respect technology greatly (it definitely has a very important place), I am striving to develop a program based around the philosophy of simple goodness. I want my “interactive” component to involve another person and the “movement” in it to come from little arms and not from the shifting and clicking of a mouse.

I hope that someday soon that you, too, will have a day like mine.