about itsy bitsy

itsy bitsy is a manufacturer of unique baby clothing and accessories. we are a mother/daughter team who combine our creative skill sets to provide high quality products that strive to enhance each child's uniqueness and individuality. we hope our products bring out the smile in all of us!

our blog includes links to purchase our products, information about us and our family, informative news articles, how we make our products... just an array of various baby and toddler information!

Monday, April 28, 2008

thanks!


thanks for supporting our venture through your ebay purchases! we have plenty more items we'll be posting over the next month.

enjoy!

Sunday, April 13, 2008

ebay to support itsy bitsy!

check out items on ebay that we are selling in order to raise money to support our business!

the below link will take you directly to what we are selling:

http://search.ebay.com/_W0QQsassZshopitsybitsy

happy bidding :)

Wednesday, April 9, 2008

welcome baby Mia Cory!


welcome to the world baby Mia Cory born on Monday April 7th at 4:40pm, 7 lbs. 3 oz.

we are all excited about our new addition to the family!

Friday, April 4, 2008

"...Built to Coo at the Sight of a Baby..."

a very interesting article we'd like to pass along

"Some Scientists Argue We Are Built to Coo At the Sight of a Baby

April 4, 2008
Wall Street Journal Online
SCIENCE JOURNAL
By ROBERT LEE HOTZ

We are drawn to a baby face, whether or not we claim to like children. Our brain can't help itself. Our neurons reflexively respond to an infant's big eyes, broad forehead, button nose and tiny chin, University of Oxford researchers recently reported in the online journal PLoS One.

Using a technique called magneto-encephalography that measures brain signals, the Oxford researchers found that a baby's face can seize our attention in milliseconds, activating an unusual mental organ called the fusiform gyrus that responds to human faces. Moreover, these distinctive infant features, unlike the mature features of an adult, trigger a sense of reward and good feeling in a seventh of a second. Picture Bambi's saucer-size eyes or those of Mickey Mouse.

The researchers concluded that the parental instinct is present in all of us. "It suggests we are probably all hard-wired to respond and care for babies, to help us perpetuate the species," said Oxford child psychiatrist Alan Stein, who helped conduct the experiment. "The response to an infant face is too fast to be under conscious control."

If so, where did brain cells and synapses learn anything about a face? The question goes deeper than surface appearances. Our ability to distinguish faces deftly is central to a debate about the anatomy of knowledge.

"Why do we have special regions of the brain for some higher-level abilities but not for others?" asked neuroscientist Nancy Kanwisher, who studies visual perception and cognition at MIT's McGovern Institute for Brain Research. "Are they innate? Are they learned?"

Many scientists, in fact, remain convinced that the brain's intimate knowledge of faces is a byproduct of its ability to capture the visual essence of any object. "You can show that parts of the brain most selective for faces are also responsive to cars in a car expert and birds in a bird expert," said psychologist Isabel Gauthier at Vanderbilt University.

So far, researchers have found four clusters of expert brain cells. One responds to faces; another just to places; a third to body parts, such as feet, knees, elbows and hands. There also is brain tissue devoted just to the visual appearance of written words -- and that intrigues researchers on both sides of the debate, because humanity hasn't been reading or writing long enough for evolution to lend a hand. "Letters and words could not be innate," Dr. Gauthier said.

That suggests something fundamental about the flexibility of the mind. Nature and nurture work together to shape our perceptions.

To our eyes, every face is a unique volume in the library of human nature. We read its language of expressions at a glance, fluently translating a curled lip, raised eyebrow or averted gaze. "There are billions of faces in the world, and we can recognize them all and tell them all apart," said UCLA neuropsychologist Susan Bookheimer.

On average, the brain takes only 200 milliseconds to tell one face from another, responding swiftly and selectively to cues of gender, ethnicity and identity, University of Southern California scientists reported recently in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

So attuned are we to the pattern of eyes, nose and mouth that we can see faces where none exist: in cloud banks or rock formations on Mars, and even in the shape of a cinnamon bun said to resemble Mother Teresa. When that neural ability falters, as in autism, we can find friendly faces threatening. In a rare disorder called prosopagnosia, we can't recognize faces at all.

Through brain-scanning experiments, researchers have located the neurochemical essence of our face expertise in a strip of temporal-lobe tissue about two inches long and three-quarters of an inch wide. Studying this face recognition area in macaque monkeys, neurobiologist Doris Tsao at the University of Bremen, Germany, reported in Science that the tissue consisted almost entirely of neurons that responded just to faces.

To understand how the tissue develops, Yoichi Sugita at Japan's Neuroscience Research Institute raised infant monkeys for two years without ever showing them a face. Lab workers wore hoods. When faces were finally revealed to them, the monkeys could readily tell them apart, Dr. Sugita reported in January in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

"It is mind-blowing," Dr. Kanwisher said. "If you had to bet, you would bet it is innate."

http://online.wsj.com/public/article_print/SB120724976133187245.html
Copyright 2008 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved

Wednesday, April 2, 2008

kids say the darnest things...

i spent some time with my nephews and niece this weekend and i had some board games (you know like the kind we used to play with when we were kids) in my car as i was cleaning out a closet and really have no use from them so planning on putting into storage at my parents until i have my own kids. my one nephew asked if he could play them and i said well they are adult games, i don't have any kids games. he says with a puzzling look "well why not Aunt Katie?" my reply, "well you see Ethan i don't have any kids of my own and until i do i really have no need for kids games." (i'm thinking great reply that'll keep him quiet for at least 30 seconds- but not so fast...) he replys back "i think you should get some kids then." me- "okay hmmm, well i'm sure one day i'll get some kids but not today." (okay then, that's the end of the conversation right-nah" Ethan goes "okay in 5 days you get some kids then you can get some kids toys and i can come over and play them." well... 5 days, might be kind of hard considering i'm not pregnant and have no intentions of jumping into an adoption situation in the next 5 days. "well Ethan, i'll ahve to get back to you on that, 5 days is very soon and i'm not ready for kids that soon." Ethan: "okay then 100 days, is that good?" --- me: "yes Ethan, i'll see what i can do about that." ... so in the meantime i'm going to go stock my house with some 'kids games' maybe then my nephew will forgot about the 'kids' that he thinks comes along with the games.

kids say the darnest things, gotta love them :)