Archive for the ‘Little Urbanites in the News’ Category

First Day of School Fashion on KOIN 6

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

On Monday KOIN Studio 6 fashion contributor Kami Gray featured a ton of Little Urbanites products during her First Day of School Fashion segment. Go here to our Little Urbanites YouTube playlist to watch the adorable models and their stunning first day ensembles, and don’t forget to check out Kami’s blog, where she lists the items each model wore and where to find them.

And speaking of the first day of school, in the next few weeks expect to see lots of wonderful new fall clothing here at Little Urbanites, including exciting new items from some of our favorite companies: Splendid, Little Ella, Pink Chicken, and Petit Bateau.  There’s nothing quite like a new outfit to start off a new school year!

Little Urbanites Kindergarten Fashion Featured on KOIN Local 6

Monday, August 2nd, 2010

This afternoon at 4 PM KOIN Studio 6 fashion contributor Kami Gray will give tips on how to send your new kindergartner off to their first day in style, and she’ll be using Little Urbanites clothing and accessories to do it! Kami’s models will be sporting ensembles from exciting Little Urbanite brands like Petit Bateau, Fore! Axel and Hudson, Little Paul & Joe, Chase and Sky, Fleurville, and Skip Hop – many of which are part of our huge summer sale.

Tune into KOIN Local 6 today at 4 PM to be part of the fun!

Kids of Portland Project

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Help support Doernbecher Children’s Hospital by purchasing a fundraiser coffee-table book and receive 10% off of any item (excluding car seats, strollers, and furniture) at Little Urbanites.  Your child will be featured in the book! Go to www.kidsofportland.com for more information.

Kim Sibley's Interview with Crave Portland

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Kim Sibley is an influential person in your community and in your business but you may not even realize it until now! Not only is Kim the proud owner of Little Urbanites, a wonderfully curated children’s store in Portland’s Pearl District, she also sits on several neighborhood associations planning and implementing ways to improve our neighborhoods and business districts in Portland. With a degree in Early Childhood Education & Fine Art and seven years of experience working for a children’s museum as well as the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, Kim brings her expertise, knowledge as well as energy to Little Urbanites. Offering a unique selection of safe, worldly, and quality products, Kim provides exceptional customer service and gives expert advice for families in Portland and across the nation. Kim set aside some time for me to interview her for our CRAVE Portland Entrepreness feature and it was so much fun getting to know more about her and her business.

Tell me a little about yourself.
I grew up in New York and New Jersey and have traveled 48 out of the 50 states in the U.S.–I’ve lived everywhere too. My background is in art, and I worked at Metropolitan Museum of Art. I’m passionate about education and developing the business districts in Portland. I’m also VP of the Pearl District Business Association (PDBA), on the board for Alliance of Portland Neighborhood Business Associaion (APNBA) as well as a mentor for Mentor Portland. I also love to garden and volunteer!

What aspects of the business do you handle most?
I do all the buying for the store, merchandising, I handle marketing and public relations, web design and maintenance, and I also do sales on the weekends. I oversee all other aspects of the business, but for example financials–that’s not me, I have someone else taking care of the numbers, that’s boring to me!

What’s the significance of the name “Little Urbanites”?
My mom, Suzanne owned a kids’ store in New Jersey and I actually give her all the credit for coming up with the name. We knew that we wanted to have the business in the Pearl District, and so our customers would be city dwellers and their children would be growing up in the city.

What’s your criteria for buying for your store?
I always ask where it’s made and whose making it. In addition to uniqueness, I try to choose products that are safe, environmentally friendly and socially response. I feel that I can make an impact by making responsible choices.

What are some of the most popular products that you carry?
The Stokke Tripp Trapp high chair — “the chair that grows with your child.” It was made in the 1970’s by a dad and is actually in Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) cafe! Baby registry, strollers and stroller advice are also popular products and services. i spend hours and days helping customers find the right stroller!

In addition to your retail store, you also have your online store www.littleurbanites.com. What are the pros & cons of having both entities?
The retail store is fun, interactive, and you get to meet your customers but it also has to be open all days of the week. I really love doing social media online and working on relaunching our blog! The downside of online is the maintenance of everything!

Besides being your own boss, what’s the most rewarding aspect of having your own business?
I get a feeling of personal achievement, that you built something from the ground up and it’s become something successful. I also curate the store and go through a very in-depth selection process and research to make sure that each and every one of my products in the store has a purpose and makes a statement. That’s rewarding to me!

What do you do to maintain a balance in your life?
Balance is very difficult to achieve! I try to take at least one day off a week, garden or spend time traveling. I don’t have any children yet but Little Urbanites IS my baby and that’s where most of my focus is right now.

Do you have plans for the future of Little Urbanites?
We’ve had our online store for two years now and it’s been doing pretty well, but I’d love to grow it even more. I’d also like to open up in other locations in the future.

Any last words for our readers?
Connect with us on Facebook or Twitter! Those are both ways I’m able to connect and interact with fans and customers. I would also love your feedback on how we’re doing and what products you like!

Little Urbanites in the Community

Monday, January 26th, 2009

Thank You Ms. Kim from Little Urbanites

by nancy From Neighborhood Notes

Ms. Kim from Little Urbanites played the part of everyone’s favorite teacher at Isobel’s Clubhouse last week. I missed the event, unfortunately, but heard great feedback about how fun it was. You really just have to see Kim surrounded by children to appreciate her enthusiasm for kids. We have pictures up on our Flickr page.

Thank you Kim for teaching children about texture, reading fun stories, and helping families make their own take-home Texture Books.

Kim has also donated art and play materials to the Clubhouse, and we appreciate her generous support of families in the central city.

Cookie Magazine featutres Little Urbanites!

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

Little Urbanites article on Dwell.com

Thursday, December 4th, 2008

Modernism is for moms, says Kim Sibley, and just as importantly, their wee ones too. One year ago, Sibley opened Little Urbanites, a modern design store for kids, with her mother Suzanne Sibley in the eco-friendly city of Portland, Oregon.

Sibley’s extensive experience as an early childhood educator—ranging from teaching kids arts and crafts in a Washington state children’s museum to directing a daycare center in Portland—helps her find Little Urbanites-worthy goods, products and furniture that are age- and developmentally appropriate for kids, and pleasing to their parents’ modern design aesthetic. “I have spent the past 10 years researching so you do not have to,” she writes on the store’s website.

I recently had the chance to speak with Sibley about what’s flying off the (physical and online) shelves, being played with in the showroom, and how her interests shifted from childcare to children’s chairs.

What was the inspiration behind founding Little Urbanites?
Everyone in my family has always owned a business so I knew it was something I was going to venture into someday as well. There were all these amazing products for kids out there but no one was serving that market. I love serving a community, I love retail, and I love talking with people—plus my mother’s an interior designer—so it was a perfect fit.

Why is Portland a good city for a design store?
It’s where I wanted to live, but it’s also a place filled with progressive parents who are seeking out high-quality, eco-friendly products that are also aesthetically pleasing. People who are very creative migrate to this city, and it’s a great place to raise a family.

How do you define good design?
For children’s products, it’s those that parents are also excited about. It also needs to be age- and developmentally appropriate. Aesthetically, the biggest thing for me is something you’d never think of, for example, the Child Child Chair. An infant can sit in one seat and a child can sit in the other seat and they’re at eye level. The second I saw it, I fell in love with it. It’s something forward thinking, new, and fresh.

What makes a good design consumer?
For Little Urbanites, I think it’s parents that want to carry the aesthetic of their home into their child’s room or play area. Our customers are looking for high-quality products that can last through their kid’s childhood, that aren’t going to be destroyed, and that are made of sustainable materials. To me, those qualities are all part of being a modern store.

Why did you want to sell modern products and furniture?
They’re very timeless-looking pieces, like the mid-century modern works of Charles and Ray Eames—I’m still selling their rocker today. As long as you use high-quality materials, these designs don’t go out of style. It’s also my personal style and taste preference.

What are your criteria for selecting an item to sell?
I look at how it’s made, what material it’s made out of, the philosophy of the company, where it’s being produced, and how it’s going to service a parent and influence a child’s life in a positive way.

What’s your favorite piece in the store or online right now?
Because it’s the holidays, I really like the Max Push Car. This is the classic underneath-the-Christmas-tree gift that’s never going to go out of style. I like the Olga Rocker too. They’re both beautiful pieces.

What do the kids who come into your store tend to like the most?
They’re constantly zipping around the store on the Svan Scooter and running around on the House Kidsonroof. It’s pretty big so kids love that thing.

Visit Little Urbanites at 916 NW 10th Ave., Portland, Oregon, or online at LittleUrbanites.com.

Article In Oregon Home Magazine

Tuesday, November 25th, 2008
Our resident Interior Designer Extraordinaire, Suzanne Sibley, was recently asked to provide her expert advice on tips for decorating kids rooms. Below is the full article from Oregon Home Magazine:

12 Tips for Decorating Kids’ Rooms

E-mail

Got your heart set on building the dinosaur-shaped headboard of your dreams for your bookworm of a boy’s bed? Feel like a hip mama because you’re letting your 4-year-old pick which of 34 colors she wants her spendy maple bedroom furniture to be stained in? Oregon Home asked design mavens for pointers for decorating a kid’s room with style.

[1. Realize that there is a shelf life to nursery room décor.]

Your last three bedroom makeovers may have started with a slightly different shade of your signature periwinkle on the walls, but keep in mind that kids are ever-changing people who deserve to have décor upgrades every few years. “A lot of first-time parents do a really neat nursery for their first baby, but it’s not unusual to meet a new client and see some sort of wallpaper border with Teddy bears and alphabet letters left up and the child who is sleeping in the room is 7 years old,” says interior designer Heidi Semler, the mother of a 4 1/2-year-old daughter and a 7-year-old son, and the designer behind Heidi Semler Interior Design in Portland. “Or the new baby will be in the nursery and the older child will be in a bedroom with a toddler’s bed with one thin blanket on it and the walls in the room are shot and there’s a ratty dresser in the room. I know it can be difficult to spend a lot of energy on a child’s room, but it doesn’t take a terrible amount of effort to make a child’s room look well-loved. Even if that just means painting the room and getting a nice bed and puffing it up with fun bedding.”

[2. Outfit spaces with cubbies or bins that make it easy for kids to organize their stuff.]

Does your Great Room overflow with enough plastic toys to outfit a playroom in a daycare center? Is your daughter’s bedroom more dressing room—think clothes on the floor and shoes in a pile—than a peaceful place in which to wind down? “You have to help your kids keep clothes off of the floor and off of the bed,” says Suzanne Sibley, the co-owner of Little Urbanites in the Pearl District. “Buy organizing tools that will teach them that, after a reasonable amount of time, they need to put things back where they belong. I’m a big fan of cubbies and bins. Another cute thing you can do is get small inexpensive suitcases in colors or designs that match your décor, and leave two or three of them open on the floor. Put socks in the littlest one, pajamas in the middle one and clothing in the largest one. Kids can keep their clothing together, and they can learn how to dress themselves by picking and choosing outfits from their three little suitcases.”

[3. If you’re a DIY-er who sweats the details, pair old-school shopping with online browsing.]

If you’re making your kids’ curtains or bedding to begin with, you’re already the kind of parent who likes things just so. Just remember that fabric on the Internet can look different from the fabric on a bolt, just as there may be slight variations of color from one bolt to another. “A lot of our customers want to save money so they shop for fabric online and fall in love with a material, but you don’t want to buy fabric online,” says Gina Cadenasso, the owner of the three-year-old Bolt fabric boutique in Northeast Portland. “A fabric’s color can look different online than what it really looks like. And you can’t feel something when you’re looking at a picture of it on your computer screen.” When it comes to buying 10 yards of ladybug-imprinted Japanese cotton—and three coordinating fabrics to go with it—head for your nearest fabric store.

[4. Expect a tween to lean toward sophisticated furnishings and fabrics in wacky combinations.]

Forget the hand-me-down blanket chest at the foot of a tween or teenager’s bed. “Even a tween wants her room to have a chaise lounge or an ottoman or, say, four oversized cubes done in different colors so that she can push them togther and make a big coffee table when her friends go over,” says Kate Nason., the creative force and designer behind Chairwear, a studio in Northeast Portland that fabricates such home couture details as slipcovers, bedding, curtains and Roman shades. “The tweens I’ve done bedrooms for have wanted wacky combinations like hanging a chandelier but having a shag rug beneath it. And they like a bohemian mix of fabrics—paisleys, silky fabrics, sarilike fabrics, a mix of velvets and beaded trims on lampshades. Little girls still like a lot of pink, but older girls like black and white plus one really fun, bright color such as lime-green or turquoise or a shocking pink thrown in.”

[5. Edit your child’s color choices when it comes to picking a wall color or furniture finishes.]

Involving your children in the remodeling or redecorating of their bedrooms or playroom doesn’t mean giving them free rein to paint their walls whichever color of the rainbow (think black or Barbie pink!) they want. “When you ask a small kid for his favorite color, he’ll look around until he sees something and then he’ll say, ‘Yellow!’” says Sibley, who learned this lesson 12 years ago when she had her first children’s furniture shop in Short Hills, N.J. “One client walked in with her 4-year-old and told her she could pick any one of the 36 available colors that she wanted her high-end maple furniture to be in. The 4-year-old decided to get the $4,000 worth of furniture in lime-green.”

The shop owner and interior designer says that parents need to be the Deciders of the two or three color choices that children get to select from. “If you give kids too many color choices, they become overwhelmed,” she says. “Just say, ‘Guess what? We’re painting your room! Which of these three colors do you want?’ That way, it’s exciting for them—and you won’t fall on the floor after a room is freshly painted in a color that doesn’t go with the palette
you have in your home.”

[6. Don’t over-theme big-ticket purchases in a child’s room to his or her current interests.]

If your heart’s set on finding a woodworker to make your son that dinosaur-shaped headboard that your husband always wanted as a boy, it may be time to stop and spank your inner brontosaurus lover. “Parents often want their kids to be miniature versions of themselves, but children are their own people,” says Sibley. “A child’s room is not your room. It should be an environment in which a child feels as if it is his or hers. When your 2- or 3-year-old is ready to leave his nursery behind, that’s the time to say, ‘Let’s welcome the little child emerging from our baby!’ Besides, if you have a Raggedy Ann and Andy-themed nursery, you’re probably sick of it anyway!”

Semler agrees. She’s alway steered away from both babylike décor in her kids’ rooms and rooms with a theme that calls for everything to match. “Kids grow so fast,” she says. “By 7, most boys are no longer interested in little trains; they’re already into sports and ‘boy’ stuff.”

[7. Don’t put lux touches where you don’t need them.]

Don’t break the bank on sheets that will see a lot of wear and tear. “I don’t spend money on 400-thread-count sheets for kids because, well, things happen,” says Semler. “I just bought some cute Tommy Hilfiger sheets with hula girls on them for $18 for a twin set. He also does some with pink-and-white stripes with a green pelican on them. Kids like bright-colored sheets that you can mix and match.”

[8. Don’t feel as if a child’s room must accommodate every one of his activities.]

Do you want your child’s room to feel more like the last stop before Sleepyville? Like a miniature Great Room in which lots of different activities could take place? “I try to keep my kids’ bedrooms for sleeping and peaceful, relaxing time,” says Semler. “They have a designated place to do homework in, but it isn’t where they go to sleep. When they want to play, we go in the playroom and we play, but when it’s bedtime, I don’t want all their toys distracting them. When we go to bed, we enjoy the peacefulness of their cozy rooms.”

[9. Select finishes that infuse a space with fun!]

Don’t feel as if you have to make a kid’s room a sophistication station. Sometimes a feel-good or zippy print for, say, bedding is more to a child’s liking. “Polka dots are so much fun,” says Nason. “I’ve got some fabric in the shop where the dots are big dots embroidered onto the material, then the dots are outlined in a different color from the dots. Polka dots are everywhere.”

[10. Don’t turn into a momzilla when you start decorating your first nursery.]

Lean into finishing off a nursery over time. “Catalogs make first-time moms think that when they open the door to their baby’s nursery, they should see a nursery that looks like the ones they see in catalogs and that not one thing should need to be added or done in the future,” says Sibley. “I find that sad because a nursery should grow as your child does. It should incorporate gifts you receive and things that mean something to you. I try to stop my clients from thinking that the day they buy their nursery furniture, they need to have their color on the walls and the right lighting in the room and the right books on the shelves. That makes it too overwhelming. Finish off the nursery over time. Don’t corner yourself into thinking that the day your baby comes home, the nursery is set in stone.”

[11. Relinquish control with the little stuff.]

If your child wants crazy color in his room—think screaming yellow or you’re-living-inside-a-grape purple—put the youza hues in the accessories that are easy to change out. “You don’t want to control everything,” says Sibley. “Put color in little things like pillows, storage bins, little trash pails or a lampshade. That way, you may not like the item, but you can live with it.”

[12. Make sure there’s enough light in the room to read a book by.]

Who hasn’t gone to a motel room with the idea of catching up on a short stack of The New Yorker only to find that the reading lamp on your side of the bed is too low to read a magazine by? Make sure that your child’s room has good task and mood lighting. “Have a little place where your kids can sit and look at a book with mommy and daddy—if they’re young—or read on their own if they’re older,” says Sibley. “A good table lamp, an overhead lamp and a nightlamp is good, too.”