My first niece was born when I was just 16. Given that my oldest sister is 15 years my senior and had been married for over 5 years when she finally came along I felt I had been waiting forever to become an aunty. I, like all my family, was baby mad and our gorgeous niece was doted upon. I crocheted her a little matinee jacket and a blanket as I recall.
I also bought her a teddy bear. Not just any teddy bear. I had very strict stipulations as to what constituted a proper teddy bear. He had to be brown or yellow, he had to be jointed and he had to have an intelligent look on his face. He also had to be affordable to a 16 year old whose income was a small allowance from her parents supplemented by money from babysitting.
That bear was the first of many. Over the years I bought each of my nieces and nephews a teddy bear, usually whilst they were in utero but occasionally afterwards. I ended up with 20 nieces and nephews on my side and 4 on my husband's side. I stuck to my criteria re the being brown or yellow and being jointed. The intelligent look wasn't as important :) When writing this post I put out a request to my nieces and nephews for a photo of their bears. Whilst I was a long way short of the 24 I had bought I was delighted to get photos of a number of these precious bears (including the original one pictured above)
When my 4 children came along different ones in my family took it upon themselves to buy a bear for them using the same criteria.
Edit I found him. He was safely tucked away in a box in our Harry Potter cupboard (the cupboard under the stairs)
Here are the the boy's teddies all together again. |
By the time my great nieces and nephews started to arrive I was over buying stuffed animals for babies. I had seen how they seem to multiply in baskets and cupboards. I had become a quilter though and so I started to make quilts for these new family members and after a while I started to incorporate the teddy bear theme with them too either in the pattern themselves or by incorporating stitcheries that my mum enjoyed doing.
I do love bears
There were decorated bears all over Berlin when I visited there in 2013. How much fun for a bear lover like myself
Quilts don't really float my boat but I appreciate the art. My old teddy bear is long, long gone. Decomposed in landfill somewhere I guess.
ReplyDeletelook at all the teddies! I was a cute kid, if I do say so myself. :D
ReplyDeleteYou my dear were a very cute baby and toddler... and still are gorgeous :)
DeleteVisiting from the A to Z Challenge. This is a lovely post! How cool that you started such a special tradition in your family. And I love that you came across those bears in Berlin. I bet that felt great. I collect elephants so I always feel thrilled when I come across something fun like that! I look forward to the rest of your Alphabet posts!
ReplyDeleteI replied to your email but since I was on here replying to the others thought I would reply here. It is a special tradition. Your mention of elephants has sent me hairing off to find the elephants we saw in London in 2010!
DeleteHi! Fellow A-to-Z'er here....What a cute post! I enjoyed looking at all the teddies. We had a red one when I was a kid but that soon got ruined when I decidedto give it a bath :( I like the quilt idea also. I've always wanted to create one after seeing the movie How to Make an American Quilt, but I don't have the skills nor the time to develop such a skill.
ReplyDeleteNice post!!! :)
Wonderful heartwarming post. :) Your quilts are amazing!
ReplyDeleteSo much cuteness!! The Berlin bears are super cool. I love public art like that. We have a local city that has done the same with frogs...
ReplyDeleteExcellent post. I like it. Please check out my site also Hotmail Change Password
ReplyDelete