Thing 1 and Thing 2 Shirts No sewing skills needed for these simple costumes! Make the shirts, then just add a bit of blue hair paint or fun blue wigs and you’re all set for Dr. Seuss Day, Halloween, or another dress-up occasion!
Thing 1 and Thing 2, he springs one more surprise on them by cleaning up the entire house just in the nick of time. Snatch up this Dr. Seuss Cat in the Hat t-shirt today with the famous character on the front along with the quote, "Let's do something fun." We are sure the kid...
Directions for the Things’ Shirts 1. Have each child wear a red shirt. 2. Cut out circles from white construction paper. 3. Children write “Thing” at the top of the circle. 4. They then write the appropriate number underneath. Mary Poppins was Thing 1, I was Thing 2, the next st...
My kids and I stumbled upon a picture of thing one and thing two Halloween costumes when I was pregnant and decided to be a thing family for Halloween with the kids being thing 1, 2 & 3. We used blue temporary hair spray to make our hair blue, I made matching tutus for my three d...
Seuss before he became a children’s author… …Richard Decker picked up some extra cash illustrating this ad for Arrow shirts… …which segues to our other New Yorker cartoonists, such as H.O. Hoffman… …and yet another bride, with sugar daddy, courtesy of Whitney Darrow Jr… …William...
I never knew there was such a thing as a dr suess font? Learn something new every day. Thanks for passing along these links. Have a great weekend. Beth Like 1 0 Rate This Christine | February 26, 2011 at 11:06 am What a cool idea- they look just like the Dr. Seuss books. ...
Classic Dr. Seuss books likeAnd to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street(1937),The Cat in the Hat(1957) andWacky Wednesday(1974) showed kids warped worlds that taught them how to share and care and do right by others, even when things get really, really weird. ...
You have to remember that JCPenney was founded during the gold rush to sell comfortable-but-durable St. John's Bay® polo shirts to miners. In those old-timey days, they added e's to everything. Old was "olde", a penny was a "penney", and the letter Y was spelled "ye", as ...