Flower Girl Shoes - White Linen Ballet Slipper Baby And Toddler Girl - Sales

These simple ballet slipper booties are perfect for little flower girls. They are handmade with a white linen and lined with a white cotton. The ties are long white ribbons and the soles are fabric. Available Sizes: 0 to 3 Months | 3 1/4 inches3 to 6 Months | 3 1/2 inches6 to 9 Months | 4 inches9 to 12 Months | 4 1/2 inches12 to 18 Months | 5 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 6 | 5 1/2 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 7 | 6 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 8 | 6 1/4 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 9 | 6 1/2 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 10 | 6 3/4 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 11 | 7 1/4 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 12 | 7 5/8 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 13 | 7 3/4 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 1 | 8 inches (with non-slip bottoms)Size 2 | 8 1/4 inches (with non-slip bottoms)The non-slip bottom material is a white grippy material. If you would like non-slip bottoms on any size, please let me know.Larger sizes are available for additional charge. Send me a convo and I can create a custom listing for you.I recommend measuring the bottom of the child's foot to make sure the booties will fit. The booties may be hand washed in cold water and air dried as needed for care.All booties come wrapped in a sweet little package. If you are sending them as a gift, please let me know and I will gladly include a custom note from you.***Please be sure to read the shop announcement for up to date shipping times***Please check out my other items http://www.etsy.com/shop/tillywhistle-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------***Wholesale inquiries welcome! Most of the items in my shop are available for wholesale. Please send me a message for additional informations***

By Michael O’Sullivan | Washington Post. In its broadest parameters, Disney’s “The Nutcracker and the Four Realms” hews only loosely to its source materials: German writer E.T.A. Hoffmann’s 1816 fantasy story “The Nutcracker and the Mouse King” and the two-act ballet – now a staple of Christmastime entertainment – that is based on it. Otherwise, the film, a mix of live action and CGI, is, for better and for worse, pure Disney. What that means is a visual spectacle that is wildly imaginative, dazzling and, more often than not, charming, harnessed to a screenplay (by Ashleigh Powell) that pads out the slender, dreamlike fable at its heart with an at times needlessly busy narrative that evokes “Alice in Wonderland,” “The Chronicles of Narnia” and, at its most extravagant, Cirque du Soleil. That said, the movie also includes passages of simple ballet featuring Misty Copeland. While doing little to advance the larger story, the beautiful dance sequences make for a delightful reminder of the film’s roots. The score, by James Newton Howard, also mixes in plentiful chunks of Tchaikovsky’s familiar music.

As with most versions of the ballet, the story centers on a girl named Clara Stahlbaum (Mackenzie Foy) and opens at a Christmas Eve party that is attended by her father (Matthew Macfadyen) and godfather (Morgan Freeman), a toymaker of ingenious contrivances named Drosselmeyer, In this London-set version of the tale, when Clara wanders off in search of her present from Drosselmeyer, the key to a locked, ornate metal egg, flower girl shoes - white linen ballet slipper baby and toddler girl she enters – via a “Narnia”-like magic portal – an alternate universe..

There, she meets the film’s title character: a wooden nutcracker who has turned into a young soldier named Philip (Jayden Fowora-Knight). He introduces Clara to four realms: the lands of Sweets, Snowflakes, Flowers and Amusements, each one reigned over by a different regent (played to perfection by Keira Knightley, Richard E. Grant, Eugenio Derbez and Helen Mirren, respectively). In this telling, there is dissent among the regents, and Mirren’s character – known as Mother Ginger, a character from the ballet under whose voluminous skirts live a coterie of clowns – is presented as the villain.

But all is not as it seems, In Powell’s screenplay, as in the ballet, a battle ensues among mice, tin soldiers, Clara, Philip and various others, but it is in service of an extraneous power struggle that doesn’t make much logical sense if you think about it too hard, (Don’t worry, you won’t, There’s too much to look at.) A subplot involves Clara’s journey of self-discovery and feminist empowerment, a seemingly de rigueur plot point these days in every female-centric Disney offering from “Beauty and flower girl shoes - white linen ballet slipper baby and toddler girl the Beast” to “A Wrinkle in Time.”..

And good for them. “The Nutcracker and the Four Realms” can be a little bit scary at times. The Mouse King, for instance, is a horse-size mouse-cloud made up of hundreds of squirming, normal-size rodents. Kudos to the special effects team that dreamed this thing up, but ew. Otherwise, the action is all make-believe, involving, for the most part, toys with nonlethal weapons. In the end, “Nutcracker” is a delightfully old-school diversion. The plot may not always hum with the clockwork precision of one of Drosselmeyer’s mechanical toys, but like a music box, it nevertheless plays a sweet tune.

Floral Fantasy: Assistance League of San Jose hosts a luncheon and demonstration by Kren Rasmussen of Bloomsters, creating sculptural fall arrangements, Nov, 9, 11 a.m.-2 p.m, The Villages, 2800 The Villages Fairway Drive, $80, www.alsj.org, Rose Garden Farmers Market: Saturdays, 10 a.m.-2 p.m, Lincoln High School parking lot, 577 Dana Ave, Farmers Market: Willow Glen’s market operates year-round, Saturdays, 9 a.m.-1 p.m. Willow Glen Community Center, 2175 Lincoln Ave., San Jose, flower girl shoes - white linen ballet slipper baby and toddler girl Thanksgiving Luncheon: The Almaden Senior Association hosts a luncheon with turkey and all the fixings, and live music by the Crooners, Nov, 14, 2-4 p.m, Almaden Community Center, 6445 Camden Ave, $14 members, $17 non-members, 408-268-1133..

Senior Tennis: Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8-11 a.m. Bramhall Park, 1320  Willow St., San Jose. Contact Barb Jarvis at 408-286-9369. Willows Cafe: Lunch is served Monday-Friday, 11 a.m.-1 p.m. The menu usually includes entree, vegetables, side dish, salad, fruit and milk for a suggested donation of $3 for adults 60 and older/$6 for guests under 60. Willow Glen Community and Senior Center, 2175 Lincoln Ave., San Jose. Reservations required 48 hours in advance to 408-265-0915. Kirk Café at Camden: Seniors are invited to enjoy lunch and make friends at this program offered every weekday. Enjoy special events, birthday parties and guest speakers. Lunch is served Monday through Friday at noon. Suggested donation is $3 for adults 60 years and older. Camden Community Center, 3369 Union Ave, San Jose. Reservations are required (24 hours in advance). 408-371-2888.

Seussical Jr.: Playful People Productions presents flower girl shoes - white linen ballet slipper baby and toddler girl the musical based on Dr, Seuss stories and characters, Nov, 2-4, Historic Hoover Theatre, 1635 Park Ave, $10-$15 at www.playfulpeople.net, $12-$18 door, Dia de los Muertos: A cultural celebration featuring performances, storytelling, special art activities and a traditional altar, Nov, 4, noon-5 p.m, Children’s Discovery Museum, 180 Woz Way, $11–$12, cdm.org, 408-298- 5437, The Music Man: There’s trouble in River City when a fast-talking salesman gets his heart stolen by the town librarian, Through Nov, 10, Lincoln High School, 555 Dana Ave, $11-$30, www.lincolnperformingarts.com..



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