Anonymous wrote:Sad beige has its place. Items should have colors distinguishing the differences for function, not at random (which, unfortunately, is how almost all kid toys are designed). Think of a real piano: white and black keys are different colors and sizes for a reason. Little kid pianos have red, white, blue, etc for absolutely no reason. It doesn't teach them anything. Even things like a letter puzzle--why are they all sorts of colors? You want your kid to focus on the differences between the letters; not the colors that serve absolutely no purpose. Even two colors (one for consonants, one for vowels) would be better than the absolute nonsense that these companies put out.
Think about a small puzzle with a yellow triangle, blue circle and red square. Triangles are not inherently yellow. The yellow is not a feature you want your kid focusing on. Is it harmful? Probably not. But is it helpful? No.
Here is a perfect example of the type of toy where adding colors would be a hinderance to learning: https://www.amazon.com/Cylinder-Montessori-Eductional-Materials-Preschool/dp/B087TYY87G/ref=asc_df_B087TYY87G?mcid=bf8bd41f1cb03c4a87cbe9e4ab9b6a91&hvocijid=8505274019129288505-B087TYY87G-&hvexpln=73&tag=hyprod-20&linkCode=df0&hvadid=721245378154&hvpos=&hvnetw=g&hvrand=8505274019129288505&hvpone=&hvptwo=&hvqmt=&hvdev=c&hvdvcmdl=&hvlocint=&hvlocphy=9007594&hvtargid=pla-2281435179338&psc=1
I love color in decorating. But asking little kids to focus on differences in size, shape, AND color when only two of those is relevant would be pointless. Don't knock all the wooden toys, just because you don't understand their purpose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's social media. There is a group of Mormon influencers obsessed with everything beige and for whatever reason, the general American population seems to think that there is something special about them and they want to be just like them.
PLEASE buck the trends, ladies, young children NEED bright colors and visual contrast!!
Actually no, babies just need real human environments to look at near and far things. They don't need any purchased products to develop normally. Just don't leave them alone in their crib staring at a blank ceiling all day.
Sad beige is grownup overreaction to adult overstimulation from clashing, garish primary-colored toys.
In the early 2000s, there was a lot of black and white stuff to help babies' eyesight. It was very ugly and clashing en masse.
Baby Einstein - now gone from the market - had a lot of primary colors and the b&w too.
Even "The Pink Aisle" of toy stores is a long-running, but still fairly recent, toy manufacturer color trend in girls' toys.
Sad beige is a trend that plays on interest in "safer", "organic", "natural" products. It's a way of showing wealth and sophistication by demonstrating how carefully you protect your baby. Expensive (European and US) wooden toys usually don't have dangerous finishes. (Painted Chinese toys were a source of lead exposure in past decades.)
The whole garish Baby Einstein thing targeted exactly the same kind of affluent moms but through insecurity about baby intellectual development.
This is all capitalism at work.
I bought so many more baby things and toys than I ever needed. And I was far from the consumption of my friends.
Sad beige is indeed kind of pathetic-looking to me, but many people think it looks calming and natural...so the market has spoken.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The market hasn't spoken, sweetie, influencers have spoken.
Save the "sweetie" for your granddaughter.
The market has spoken. There's a difference between aspirational looks and actual sales.
Aspirational looks make it to Pinterest. When people actually buy, then manufacturers make more and more of the trendy product, and drive the trend in retail stores.
Sad beige isn't coming only from Mormon influencers. For example, I consider gray nurseries part of this trend and Pottery Barn Kids was all over that. PBK is a major trendsetter in suburban nurseries, and that kind of company has their own market-scanning designers.
Expensive uncolored wooden European and American toys are classics, and have been popular with wealthy IYKYK types since the 1960s. I've been to the Maple Landmark wooden toy factory in Middlebury, Vermont. Have you? That kind of stuff is pushed in the few high end toy stores that still exist, right along with the Steiff teddy bears.
Here's a teacher with a fun article. She mentions the growth in popularity of beige as going back to the 1960s. And an interior design trend starting before the kid product trend. When your whole space is decked out in minimalist neutrals, it looks even worse to dump a whole bunch of primary-colored plastic into the space. Nobody with eyes needs to follow influencers to notice that.
https://piccalio.com/blogs/grow/the-science-behind-the-sad-beige-moms-debate#:~:text=The%20Origin%20of%20%22Sad%20Beige%20Moms%22,-The%20origin%20of&text=Many%20people%20call%20them%20out,at%20the%20beige%20mom%20aesthetic.
Anonymous wrote:The market hasn't spoken, sweetie, influencers have spoken.
Anonymous wrote:It's social media. There is a group of Mormon influencers obsessed with everything beige and for whatever reason, the general American population seems to think that there is something special about them and they want to be just like them.
PLEASE buck the trends, ladies, young children NEED bright colors and visual contrast!!