Bag Bag Dancer Dance Liberty Pouch Ballerinas Ballet Tutu - On Sale

Dancer bag type bag with DrawString to store their stuff to dance!Details: A little Liberty and tulle tutu, little glitter ballerinas sewn and decorated with a bow in Liberty.Perfect size for storing business dance: about 38 cm * 30 cm wideIn the colors of your choice!Photo 2: same version backpack type "bundle", "bag string".When you make, tell me if you would like the version "pouch" (photo 1) or "backpack" (photo 2) as well as the child's name! (the price is identical, same size, same as lining).The wild rose pattern is in powder pink fabric and Liberty wiltshire summer garden, but it is usable in the colors of your choice!It is lined with a white cotton pique, so as to be strong!Back of the pouch: powder pink.Ideal birthday gift, home!Name of your child free personalization! (tell me the name of child at the time of ordering). The name will be gold or silver depending on fabrics selected and matched with piping!Careful shipping tracking number.

NEW SPIN ON THE LIGHT TOWER: The effort to create a new landmark light tower for San Jose continues. Steve Borkenhagen says that the Aug. 8 fundraiser brought in $120,000 — 20 percent more than its goal — and that other funding is coming in. This week, three students from ETH Zurich — the engineering and design school where Maurice Koechlin, one of the designers of the Eiffel Tower, attended — were in San Jose to present their bachelor’s thesis projects: redesigns of the San Jose Light Tower, which stood over Market and Santa Clara streets for 34 years beginning in 1881. Five teams created designs, but only the top two — as determined by Borkenhagen and San Jose Light Tower Corp. partners Jon Ball and Thomas Wohlmut — were invited to San Jose. Both designs were interesting takes on the original: One included climbing vines that would create a “green tower” and the other created a spiral effect by slightly rotating each of the tower’s seven levels.

The student designs aren’t currently under consideration for the project — an “ideas competition” to find a new design will be held in the bag bag dancer dance liberty pouch ballerinas ballet tutu future — but it’s fascinating to see how our old tower has received some new attention from halfway around the world, You can keep tabs on the project, or donate, at sanjoselighttower.org, HURRICANE RELIEF: As they did following Hurricane Katrina and Hurricane Sandy, Deb and Mark Harville have organized a musical benefit for Hurricane Harvey recovery at the Cats in Los Gatos on Saturday, It will feature about a dozen other musical friends who will be playing from 3 to 6 p.m, You can bring checks to the American Red Cross to the event, and the bands will be passing the hat for cash donations during breaks in the show..

From seafood celebrations to seaside art and wine, the Bay Area’s bursting with fests and fairs this week with something for everyone. Pittsburg Seafood & Music Festival. Get ready for gumbo, crawfish, barbecued oysters, mussels, chowder – even alligator on a stick. If it comes from the water, it will probably be at Pittsburg’s late-summer Seafood & Music Festival, a two-day, outdoor extravaganza of gastronomic proportions, now in its 33rd year. And there’s music too, plus rides for kids, rock-wall climbing, jet-ski races and more.

Deets: 10 a.m, to 8 p.m, Sept, 9, 10:30 a.m, to bag bag dancer dance liberty pouch ballerinas ballet tutu 7:30 p.m.Sept, 10; Pittsburg Marina, 200 Marina Blvd., near Old Town, Pittsburg; $11 general admission; www.pittsburgseafoodandmusicfestival.com, Mountain View Art & Wine Festival, Mountain View’s vibrant revitalized Castro Street district is always a treat with tree-lined streets, great shops and restaurants, But when the annual Art & Wine Festival arrives, it takes things up a notch, With more than 600 booths of original artwork in glass, ceramics, metals, wood and fine art, the festival has been voted “Best Festival in the South Bay” multiple times by readers of the Metro, New this year is the Saturday Soul Train Dance Party, the Cornhole Corner and the What’s Up Photo Booth. Deets: 11 a.m, to 7 p.m, Sept, 9, 10 a.m, to 6 p.m, Sept, 10; Castro Street (between El Camino Real and Evelyn Avenue), Mountain View; free admission; www.mountainview.miramarevents.com..

Castro Valley Fall Festival. The two-day festival features more than 150 booths of fine arts, crafts, local wines and food plus community groups and nonprofit organizations. The 45th annual fest’s theme this year is “Back to the Boulevard,” bringing the event back to its early roots along Castro Valley Boulevard after being displaced during streetscape work. Deets: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., Sept. 9-10; Castro Valley Blvd. (at Redwood Road), Castro Valley; free admission; www.edenareachamber.com/fall-festival.

Silicon Valley Fall Festival, Cupertino, With a small-town feel amid this booming tech region, Cupertino’s Silicon Valley Fall Festival offers a fun-filled, family-friendly community day with a robotics competition, a drone demonstration, a marching band, a bike rodeo, cultural and educational activities, food trucks, live entertainment, a kids zone and opening ceremonies with city dignitaries, Parking is free at De Anza College. Deets: 10 a.m, to 5 p.m., Sept, 9; Memorial Park, 10185 N, Stelling Blvd., Cupertino; free bag bag dancer dance liberty pouch ballerinas ballet tutu admission; www.sites.google.com/site/cupfallfestival/..

Capitola Art & Wine Festival. Enjoy summer’s last hurrah seaside at the Capitola Art & Wine Festival where you’ll find – surprise – art and wine – plus lots of music, food, street performers and more in the charming Capitola Village overlooking Monterey Bay. Browse work from more than 160 fine artists while sipping exceptional wines from 22 Santa Cruz Mountain wineries. The Festival Food Court offers everything from oysters to Hawaiian Poke. And the Kids Art & Music Area provides ongoing craft projects for the younger set.

After two years of laying the groundwork, San Francisco’s Yerba Buena Center for the Arts will debut Transform, a new festival (Sept, 14-23) featuring commissioned works by seven local performance companies addressing the theme “Why bag bag dancer dance liberty pouch ballerinas ballet tutu citizenship?”, In an interview Isabel Yrigoyen, the center’s Associate Director of Performing Arts, said, “What most people don’t know or understand is what YBCA … curates.” She pointed out that, though LINES Ballet and Smuin are among the performing groups that rent the center’s facilities, Transform will “concentrate our own curatorial vision in a two-week period in the fall and another in the spring over the coming years.”..



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