Friday, 31 October 2014

Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Toddler Pajamas Biography

source (google.com.pk)
Pajamas were loungewear and sleepwear that consisted of pants and jacket tops. The word derived from two Hindi terms: "pa(y)," for leg, and "jamah," for garment. It entered the English language around 1880 as "pyjamas," after the British colonized India, where Hindi was spoken. Americans adopted the term from the British as "pajamas."

Pajamas for men, women, and children became popular in the United States during the 1920s. For men, they replaced nightshirts, which were one-piece long-sleeved shirts that flowed down to or below the knees. Men's pajamas were loose fitting. The trousers had drawstrings around the waist, or were fastened by a few buttons in the front. The tops were collarless or with a relaxed collar that could remain undone or be buttoned closed. Tops had a line of buttons down the front or were held closed by overlapping the front panels across the chest and tying a sash around the waist. Men's pajamas were made of cotton, silk, or rayon, which then was called artificial silk. Men who wanted warmth against winter nights chose heavyweight cotton flannel pajamas. Although conservative dressers wore solid, drab-colored sleep outfits, many others chose pajamas in stripes and lively prints. The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., holds a rather colorful pair of pajamas worn by American president Warren G. Harding (1865–1923) in the early 1920s. They are turquoise silk with white leaves that are appliquéd, or attached, onto the garment.

Women envied the comfort of men's pajamas and, in the liberated atmosphere that followed World War I (1914–18), adopted the attire to their own lifestyles. Women wore pajamas for sleeping and also for lounging about the home and the beach. Most women's pajamas were made of flowing fabrics such as silk, satin, chiffon, or rayon. They featured loose, ankle-length pants that hung straight at the bottom or were drawn tight around the ankle by a ribbon or lacing. The waistlines of the pants had drawstrings. Tops were hip-length jackets with varying sleeve lengths. A home sewing pattern sold by the Butterick Publishing Company of Massachusetts offered the seamstress a choice of necklines: rounded, squared, or with a rounded collar. Women's pajamas sometimes were quite stylized, even whimsical. For instance, on occasion they were designed in silk in an Oriental fashion that featured loose, wide sleeves like kimonos, the loose robes worn by Japanese men and women. They were printed colorfully with renderings of Japanese and Chinese objects, such as paper lanterns, geisha (female entertainer) houses, and chopsticks. Children wore pajamas primarily for sleeping. The styles were similar to adult garments.
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Toddler Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Mens Pajama Pants Biography

source (google.com.pk)
Pajamas were loungewear and sleepwear that consisted of pants and jacket tops. The word derived from two Hindi terms: "pa(y)," for leg, and "jamah," for garment. It entered the English language around 1880 as "pyjamas," after the British colonized India, where Hindi was spoken. Americans adopted the term from the British as "pajamas."

Pajamas for men, women, and children became popular in the United States during the 1920s. For men, they replaced nightshirts, which were one-piece long-sleeved shirts that flowed down to or below the knees. Men's pajamas were loose fitting. The trousers had drawstrings around the waist, or were fastened by a few buttons in the front. The tops were collarless or with a relaxed collar that could remain undone or be buttoned closed. Tops had a line of buttons down the front or were held closed by overlapping the front panels across the chest and tying a sash around the waist. Men's pajamas were made of cotton, silk, or rayon, which then was called artificial silk. Men who wanted warmth against winter nights chose heavyweight cotton flannel pajamas. Although conservative dressers wore solid, drab-colored sleep outfits, many others chose pajamas in stripes and lively prints. The Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., holds a rather colorful pair of pajamas worn by American president Warren G. Harding (1865–1923) in the early 1920s. They are turquoise silk with white leaves that are appliquéd, or attached, onto the garment.

Women envied the comfort of men's pajamas and, in the liberated atmosphere that followed World War I (1914–18), adopted the attire to their own lifestyles. Women wore pajamas for sleeping and also for lounging about the home and the beach. Most women's pajamas were made of flowing fabrics such as silk, satin, chiffon, or rayon. They featured loose, ankle-length pants that hung straight at the bottom or were drawn tight around the ankle by a ribbon or lacing. The waistlines of the pants had drawstrings. Tops were hip-length jackets with varying sleeve lengths. A home sewing pattern sold by the Butterick Publishing Company of Massachusetts offered the seamstress a choice of necklines: rounded, squared, or with a rounded collar. Women's pajamas sometimes were quite stylized, even whimsical. For instance, on occasion they were designed in silk in an Oriental fashion that featured loose, wide sleeves like kimonos, the loose robes worn by Japanese men and women. They were printed colorfully with renderings of Japanese and Chinese objects, such as paper lanterns, geisha (female entertainer) houses, and chopsticks. Children wore pajamas primarily for sleeping. The styles were similar to adult garments.

Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Mens Pajama Pants Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Childrens Pajamas Biography

source (google.com.pk)
More than three decades after manufacturers stopped making children's pajamas with a flame retardant suspected of causing cancer, new research suggests the same chemical has become the most widely used fire-resistant compound in upholstered furniture sold throughout the United States.

The study, led by Duke University chemist Heather Stapleton, found that foam samples from more than 40 percent of 102 couches bought from 1985 to 2010 contained the chemical, known as chlorinated tris or TDCPP. More than half of the couches bought since 2005 were treated with it.
Overall, 85 percent of the couches contained flame retardants, which escape over time and settle in household dust that people ingest, especially young children who play on the floor and frequently put their hands into their mouths. Several of the flame retardants detected in the new study have been linked to hormone disruption, developmental problems, lower IQ and impaired fertility.

The Tribune's Playing With Fire series, published in May, revealed how flame retardants are commonly found in American homes as a result of a decades-long campaign of deception by the tobacco and chemical industries. Among other things, the leading manufacturers of flame retardants created a phony consumer group that stoked the public's fear of fire to protect and expand the use of their chemicals in furniture, electronics and other products.

The new study, to be released Wednesday in the peer-reviewed journal Environmental Science & Technology, is the first to outline how widespread flame retardants have become in furniture and suggests their use has increased in recent years. Researchers also tracked how the chemical industry has shifted over time from one troublesome flame retardant to another and has introduced new, chemically similar compounds with little or no study about potential health effects.

Another new study in the scientific journal found that chlorinated tris was the most commonly detected flame retardant in dust from the homes tested.

"People just don't have a choice now," said Arlene Blum, a University of California at Berkeley chemist and co-author of the couch study. "These chemicals are in everybody's furniture and pose serious health problems."

Earlier research by Blum led to the voluntary removal of chlorinated tris from children's pajamas in the late 1970s. Because the chemical wasn't formally banned, companies can legally add it to other products without informing government regulators or the public.

Responding to questions about the couch study, the American Chemistry Council, the chief trade group for the chemical industry, said flame retardants in furniture help save lives.

"There is no data in this study that indicate that the levels of flame retardants found would cause any human health problems," the group said in a statement.

The trade group also cited an analysis of a government-funded study that it said shows "flame retardants in upholstered furniture can provide valuable escape time" from house fires.

However, studies by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission and Underwriters Laboratories found that flame retardants in household furniture cushions provide no meaningful protection from fires.
Two of the world's leading manufacturers of the chemicals, Louisiana-based Albemarle Corp. and Israel-based ICL Industrial Products, have pledged to stop making chlorinated tris after fiercely defending its use for years.

Albemarle said it no longer markets chlorinated tris and is in the process of shutting down its production of the flame retardant and related chemicals. ICL said it will stop selling chlorinated tris for use in furniture and children's products Jan. 1 and stop making it altogether by the end of 2015. Other overseas companies still make the flame retardant.

The announcements by Albemarle and ICL come after chemical manufacturers in October 2011 failed to block California from officially listing the flame retardant as a carcinogen and moving to require warnings on products that could expose people to unsafe levels. Other major health organizations already had concluded that the chemical is a cancer risk, including the World Health Organization, the National Cancer Institute and the National Research Council.

In a statement, ICL said its decision reflected the company's "commitment to market leadership, innovation and responsiveness to market conditions and customer needs." Albemarle called its move part of an effort to restructure "underperforming assets."

More changes could be on the way. In the wake of the Tribune series, California Gov. Jerry Brown is pushing to overhaul his state's 37-year-old flammability standard for residential furniture, which if adopted could lead to a dramatic reduction in the use of chemical flame retardants.
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Childrens Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Womens Footed Pajamas

source (google.com.pk)
Any type of sleepwear appears to be a relatively recent innovation and pyjamas or adult onesies even more so.

For much of human history, only the very wealthy would have had clothing made just for sleeping in. In general, people were so tired from physical labour or hunger that they slept in their daily wear or , if they were lucky, an undershirt or smock”, which was like a vest worn next to the skin and washed every six months whether it needed it or not.

Since the Middle Ages men gradually started to wear nightshirts but then in the 18th century, colonials started introducing pyjamas to Britain. The word pyjama stems from the Hindi word paejama, meaning “leg covering”. The first recorded use of the word in English came from 1800, in a “Memorandum relative to Tippoo Sultaun’s wardrobe” (OED). If you read an English novel from before that date (e.g. Henry Fielding’s Tom Jones, 1749), you’ll find accounts of men wearing nightgowns and not pyjamas when they sleep.

According to Encyclopaedia Britannica, Pyjamas “were introduced in England as lounging attire in the 17th century but soon went out of fashion. About 1870 they reappeared in the Western world as sleeping attire for men, after returning British colonials brought (them) back…”

By the 1880s retailers were offering the two-piece jacket and “loose trousers tied at the waist” that we recognise now. By the 1930s pyjamas had become a key part of a man’s wardrobe. They were even worn at home as elegant evening attire in materials such as silk and cotton – loungewear had arrived.
ealous of children’s sleepwear? Do soft footed pajamas make you wish you were young again? No need for nostalgia, because adult footed pajamas have hit the shelves. For the cool nights ahead, stock up on these innovative pajamas for the adults in your family.
What you probably missed about those years deprived of footed pajamas was their snug warmth. These full body pajamas offer seamless shielding from the night chill. No more cold shoulders or freezing feet! Stay insulated with one-piece pajamas.
Try out fabulous patterns, from animal prints to animal characters like Snoopy, Minnie Mouse and Hello Kitty. These unique sleepwear clothing options will be nighttime essential from the late days of fall to those crisp mornings of early spring. Equipped with slip-proof shielding on the soles of the feet, feel secure while sleeping or walking.
Footie pajamas are a great way to unite the family during the holiday season. Spend the first day of the New Year lounging around in matching pajamas for the whole family, or pull them out on any other day (no special occasion required). A pair of footed pajamas is the comfortable way to lounge around on a weekend morning drinking coffee and reading the newspaper.
Adult footed pajamas channel days of yesteryear. A great gift for a childhood friend, a grown sibling or even for a parent, footed pajamas are no longer just for kids. Sleep tight tonight, in a pair of adult footed pajamas, by shopping the selection of PJs at Macy's, today.

Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Womens Footed Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Baby Pajamas Biography

source (google.com.pk)
Baby onesies at a Target store that label little boys as future superheroes and little girls as their dating partners has sparked online outrage after two University of Waterloo professors called attention to their message.

Christine Logel, an assistant professor of social psychology, found the pair of onesies at a Waterloo Target while shopping for toys for her two daughters on Sunday.

“Sadly, I was not surprised. I have come across things like this before, but I expected better of Target,” said Logel.

When Logel showed the photo she took to a store manager, she says the manager's reaction was along the lines of, “Awww, cute.”

Logel posted the photo on her Facebook page, hoping to attract attention to what she felt was a troubling message. A fellow professor, Aimee Morrison, then offered to tweet the photo in order to galvanize her followers, many of whom share an interest in comics and feminism. Morrison is an English language and literature professor.

“It’s the juxtaposition of the two articles that really sort of frames this whole feminist critique that says women are judged powerful by who they date, and men get to be powerful in their own rights,” said Morrison.

“We were kind of appalled to see this message being inscribed literally on the bodies of pretty much indistinguishable infants. They’re chubby, they’re bald, they have giant heads, they drool and they poop in diapers all day. They’re not dating anybody, but these messages are so powerful and they start so young that it seemed really noteworthy.”
Target Canada responded to questions from CBC News about the pyjamas in an email on Tuesday.

Company spokeswoman Kalynn Crump replied: "Target strives to treat all our guests with respect, and it is never our intent to offend anyone. We appreciate the feedback we’ve received and will continue to listen to our guests to ensure we offer merchandise that appeals to, and reflects, our diverse guest population.”

When asked if Target would remove the onesies from the shelves, Crump said Target didn't "have any plans to make adjustments to our assortment at this time."

Logel said she is concerned about how this messaging affects the way parents raise their children.

“There’s research that adults treat the same baby differently when think the baby’s a boy, than when they think the baby’s a girl,” said Logel.
“So you can imagine when a baby girl is wearing a message that she’s a future girlfriend of a superhero, rather than having a future as something powerful herself, you can imagine grown-ups are going to treat in her in a way, maybe more gently, and take her less seriously and sort of teach her to be more passive.”

“It makes me sad and it makes me tired,” said Morrison, on her reaction when she first saw the photo. “I would like to think that as a grown-up woman with a PhD and an important job that people are judging me … on my own accomplishments in the world, rather than what my husband does for a living, or whether I’m married or how much money my husband makes.”

Logel said she’s waiting for call from a Target manager. She wants to get the apparel removed from stores. As of Tuesday afternoon, she had not received any response.
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures

Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures
Baby Pajamas Pajamas for Women for Men Party Tumblr for Kids Clipart For Girls all Day Cartoon Pics Photo Pictures