Monday, February 22, 2010

Embrace the Unusual: Animals outside the Box

Embrace the Unusual:
Animals Outside the Box

Don't be afraid of strange! The
world is filled with extraordinary creatures big and small...and our experience tells us that for our little ones- the more unusual the better!
Nurseries are filled with little lamb and bears and giraffe and monkeys-- and we love these creatures- they are the stuff baby dreams are made of.



But there are thousands of unusual creatures- that our little ones may NEVER meet (except perhaps in the Zoo) - but they are just as important to their understanding of their own place in this big beautiful shared world.

Anyone who has watched "Meercat Manner" http://animal.discovery.com/fansites/meerkat/meerkat.html has certainly fallen in love with these smart and complex little mammals whose nurturing and endearing family relationships make them an ideal example of for our children of how other families work in the wild.





Our Meercats will be on our website any day now. If you are interested in them (and we can change the polka dot boarder to any color scheme you would like- blues, greens, yellows etc) please let us know at info@lillunia.com.


Love your Babies! Love Your Animals....

Embrace Strange!

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Green Babies

How young is too young to raise green children? And what exactly does this mean?

As parents we have an endless stream of information about behavior, food and products in order to live very healthy and proactively environmentalist lives; and this is true for us, and of course our children.


Yes, this means waisting less, recycling & reusing, trading our "disposable everything" habits for more sound practices (clothe diapers, wooden toys...). But it also means reading books with ecological messages, reading books about "real" animals in the wild world, about nature and environmental preservation. They are NOT too young to understand we all share one precious home called earth.


Children never cease to amaze with their sharp minds and generous understanding of concepts in which adults become tangled. Similar to the languages babies and young children learn with such apparent ease, environmental conservation is a language that will come naturally to your little one.
It is an interesting time in that adults are learning the language of environmentalism at the same time that we are teaching it to our children. Pretty soon, like all things digital, our children will be telling us the best practices...and as usual, we will be learning fro them.
We can and will raise a new generation of adults who do not think twice about building in environmental consequences into every decision they make...effortlessly. They will have learned very early, in the crib, in the stroller, in the park and the Zoo- what a vital role they will play in the future of our planet and its myriad and magnificent life forms.
So...no...it is never too early to lead yur babies down the road to "green-ness"- it is natural to life to want to protect and nurture one another...even little babies know this!
I get shivers thinking about it!
www.lillunia .com
*the images above can be found at http://www.lillunia.com/-FOCUS-SERIES-ART/Dierdre-s-Dolphins-p62.html and Penguins by special order at info@lillunia.com


Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Giving a "Little" some Big Love

At Lillunia we try to give all we can to the people, animals and issues that matter to us. Like so many of our friends and people in our social/working communities, we have so much to balance- it is a challenge.

One of Lillunia's founders, Laura Hill, participates in Big Brothers Big Sisters Workplace Mentoring program. In the program she has a "little" who she adores: a super talented, precocious go-getter from the Lower East Side in Manhattan. Together they are quite the pair- always giggling, creating and enjoying each other's company.

One program day Laura's little excitedly told her about her little Chihuahua "Rocco." Laura though her little might like a portrait of her little pup:



Voila!


We are so happy to share all we can with our favorite people: Big and Little!

www.lillunia.com

Monday, February 8, 2010

Living with Art: Children



I guess it is pretty unusual that all "the lovely ladies of Lillunia" were born and raised in NYC ("natives" as they say). With all of the difficulties associated with raising a family in the city, there are some extraordinary benefits; benefits that we are all certain we feel and experience to this day.
One of the amazing gifts of the city has been a life-long immersion in and engagement with art. The exposure and resources were staples of our childhoods and, although our individual experiences may have been different, the art in each of our lives had profound effects on who we are, what we care about and what we do with our lives.
Anyone who has experience with children and art (both viewing/experiencing and making their own art) is aware of the transformative effects upon them.
Children have wide-open, unspoiled imaginations...just ready for a spark. They learn so fast and furiously, that when they are given the chance to look at, process and make their own sense of images and sculpture and installations- the sky is truly the limit. It is a beautiful process to watch.
We feel so fortunate to have had such broad exposure to art when we were children and we feel this gives us special insight as adults; we understand the wide and magnificent world we present to our children when we expose them to art.
You don't have to live in NYC or a city at all to do this for your kids. With all of the digital resources and the library, we have so many ways to introduce art into the lives of the little.
Don't be afraid to show your little ones "sophisticated" images: even if you feel challenged by the "meaning"- let them engage in whatever way they do. I will never forget my then, 3-yr old niece at MOMA in NY viewing a Jackson Pollack- her words "I did that"...priceless!


*Picture 2 of the Ladies of Lillunia as kids in NYC- Lillunia founders Eve Gianni Corio and Laura L.M. Hill (1980s)

Friday, February 5, 2010

Our Animals

OUR ANIMALS

Lillunia is devoted to education, art, animals and the environment. We know that animals have so much to teach us about nurturing our little ones while not upsetting the balance of the natural world we share. In countless ways they teach us to nurture the world that nurtures us.

We also know that the people we love, LOVE their animals the way we do. They are absolutely a part of the family. This is why we decided to incorporate pet portraits into our collection of work.

The unbelievable inter-species bonds between people and their animals is something that constantly amazes and charms us- from our own extraordinary interaction with our cats and dogs and horses - to our friends experiences...the stories are all different, but all share that inexplicable, magical connection.

Love your Families, Love Your Animals...

*Melvin in the Garden and many other pet portraits are currently being incorporated into our website www.lillunia.com. For ordering information, please contact us at info@lillunia.com







Wednesday, February 3, 2010

A Poem About a Goat


A Poem About a Goat

Here at Lillunia we are moved by simple things. We are profoundly influenced by the sound of the ocean at night, the quiet murmurings of dreaming cats, hungry baby birds calling for their mothers and the moon- always the moon.

Last night I read a poem (I am perhaps the last standing poetry reader I know) in the New Yorker. I was moved. I know it is bad wrong and awful to reprint a poem that is not ours- but I am giving full and ecstatic credit to The New Yorker for publishing it and to Mark Doty for composing it. It is called PESCADERO. Lillunia has NO right to this poem except we have the right to love it. If you love animals as much as we do, please read- you will enjoy:

PESCADERO

The little goats like my mouth and fingers,

and one stands up against the wire fence, and taps on the fence board
a hoof made blacker by the dirt of the field,

pushes her mouth forward to my mouth,
so that I can see the smallish squared seeds of her teeth,
and the bristle-whiskers,

and then she kisses me, though I know it doesn't mean “kiss,”

then leans her head way back, arcing her spine, goat yoga,
all pleasure and greeting and then good-natured indifference: she loves me,

she likes me a lot, she takes interest in me, she doesn’t know me at all
or need to, having thus acknowledged me. Though I am all happiness,

since I have been welcomed by the field’s small envoy, and the splayed hoof,
fragrant with soil, has rested on the fence board beside my hand.


-Mark Doty
*published in The New Yorker,
issue dated February 8, 2010

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Social Media: New Communities


Lillunia is an intimate company, and as such, when we first thought about “social media” in relation to our company we felt awkward. It all seemed so impersonal- trendy and quite frankly, confusing. We were wrong.

Blogging has been a wonderful outlet for our thoughts, yes, but also for our message and expressing our goals as a company (and they are not small). We consider ourselves educators, contributing solid building blocks in the development of our children’s minds. Of course we take this role very seriously.

Blogging has been a way to share our insight and experience with friends and like-minded people.

Facebook, while challenging for businesses, has been a rich experience by allowing us to connect with friends and their friends, and their friends to share our brand philosophy, our art and the wonderful responses we have had from parents and their children. It has also allowed us to keep up with other wonderful blogs and companies that inspire us.

Strangely, Twitter, which I must say, I was afraid of and absolutely resisted, is my favorite of all. It is so odd, yet satisfying. It is, in my opinion, the daily “personality” of our company—Lillunia’s voice, each day, expressing what we are in small bits and pieces. We tweet about child education, baby development and play, about animal welfare and safety, about art and design, about children and their pets, their experience with art and creating art, and about our families and animals—it is personal yes, but Lillunia is a very precious and personal company…committed to real goals and beliefs far beyond the market.

All of this to say simply, social media is amazing in that it has changed and enhanced our community. We love our friends, fans and followers- we feel very much “a part” and that is amazing. Thank you.
www.lillunia.com