Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm going to differ a little here. I think if a kidi is having a party that is not a costume party, and one guest shows up in a full Iron Man costume, that is going to make them the center of attention and is maybe not kind to the birthday child. I would discourage it for that reason. But, that said, if you have a child that is extremely rigid, and won't go out unless he's in his Iron Man costume, I would be understanding.
I don't think a tutu, or something like that, falls into the same category as a full costume. Same with kids that want to wear PJs to a party. NBD.
This. Don't let your kid wear the Elsa dress and make all the other little girls jealous when it's not a princess party.
+1. This. My daughter would be upset if someone is wearing Elsa’s dress abs she’s not. Even worse if she’s the birthday girl.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still pick out my kids' clothes for them. So they wouldn't ever think to just ... put on a costume?
Wait have you had a 2 or 3 year old in your house yet? Both my kids at age 2 started to have massive opinions about what they'd wear!
Oh yes. My kids are 6 and 7.5. I just am really shallow and superficial when it comes to clothes. When the oldest started to care, I created a "clothing fairy" who came while she was sleeping and laid out her clothes for the next day. I still do this. My 7 yr old knows it's me, though I've never admitted it, and will sometime say "I hope the clothing fairy puts out my aqua dress for tomorrow because Elsa and I agreed to both wear aqua," or something. And if her request is reasonable (clean, weather appropriate, situationally appropriate) then I'll do it.
But I will totally keep doing this as long as I can. So far, neither kid cares what they wear for the most part. When I travel for work I have to tell DH to do it and I lay out each day's outfit in a drawer so it's easy for him.
Yes, I fully recognize how ridiculous this is. I will continue on despite that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm going to differ a little here. I think if a kidi is having a party that is not a costume party, and one guest shows up in a full Iron Man costume, that is going to make them the center of attention and is maybe not kind to the birthday child. I would discourage it for that reason. But, that said, if you have a child that is extremely rigid, and won't go out unless he's in his Iron Man costume, I would be understanding.
I don't think a tutu, or something like that, falls into the same category as a full costume. Same with kids that want to wear PJs to a party. NBD.
This. Don't let your kid wear the Elsa dress and make all the other little girls jealous when it's not a princess party.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still pick out my kids' clothes for them. So they wouldn't ever think to just ... put on a costume?
Wait have you had a 2 or 3 year old in your house yet? Both my kids at age 2 started to have massive opinions about what they'd wear!
Anonymous wrote:This was a battle I decided not to fight. My daughter showed up at a princess party with a Batgirl costume and to non-dress-up parties in princess costumes (she was never the only one). She wasn't allowed to wear costumes to preschool, but the rest of the time it just wasn't worth the fight. That stage only lasts a little while.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to differ a little here. I think if a kidi is having a party that is not a costume party, and one guest shows up in a full Iron Man costume, that is going to make them the center of attention and is maybe not kind to the birthday child. I would discourage it for that reason. But, that said, if you have a child that is extremely rigid, and won't go out unless he's in his Iron Man costume, I would be understanding.
I don't think a tutu, or something like that, falls into the same category as a full costume. Same with kids that want to wear PJs to a party. NBD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still pick out my kids' clothes for them. So they wouldn't ever think to just ... put on a costume?
Wait have you had a 2 or 3 year old in your house yet? Both my kids at age 2 started to have massive opinions about what they'd wear!
Oh yes. My kids are 6 and 7.5. I just am really shallow and superficial when it comes to clothes. When the oldest started to care, I created a "clothing fairy" who came while she was sleeping and laid out her clothes for the next day. I still do this. My 7 yr old knows it's me, though I've never admitted it, and will sometime say "I hope the clothing fairy puts out my aqua dress for tomorrow because Elsa and I agreed to both wear aqua," or something. And if her request is reasonable (clean, weather appropriate, situationally appropriate) then I'll do it.
But I will totally keep doing this as long as I can. So far, neither kid cares what they wear for the most part. When I travel for work I have to tell DH to do it and I lay out each day's outfit in a drawer so it's easy for him.
Yes, I fully recognize how ridiculous this is. I will continue on despite that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still pick out my kids' clothes for them. So they wouldn't ever think to just ... put on a costume?
Wait have you had a 2 or 3 year old in your house yet? Both my kids at age 2 started to have massive opinions about what they'd wear!
Anonymous wrote:I am a lazy parent. Fewer rules was easier for us. So other than special events like Halloween or pajama day at preschool. the rule was that costumes and pj’s were for inside our house or out yard.
Anonymous wrote:Mom of a 3.5 year old here. If you want to show up to my DD's birthday party in a costume, knock your socks off. I know damn well that trying to argue them out of an outfit is damn near impossible around this age.
Anonymous wrote:I'm going to differ a little here. I think if a kidi is having a party that is not a costume party, and one guest shows up in a full Iron Man costume, that is going to make them the center of attention and is maybe not kind to the birthday child. I would discourage it for that reason. But, that said, if you have a child that is extremely rigid, and won't go out unless he's in his Iron Man costume, I would be understanding.
I don't think a tutu, or something like that, falls into the same category as a full costume. Same with kids that want to wear PJs to a party. NBD.