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Blogging Baby Size 6X: Parent friendly party favors

Categories: Fun & activities, Holidays

Since my son had a birthday last month, I've been thinking and posting about birthday party favors pretty often. I don't like cluttery bags of garbage at the end of a birthday celebration to be later sucked up in my vacuum cleaner, but I also like the idea of giving party goers a little something to take home at the end of the party because that's fun.

People had some really good ideas for party favors so I thought I'd round up some of them and since there were so many great ideas I had to pump up our usual 'six' format to 6x.


  • A mix cd of great kid's music (like Laurie Berkner, Justin Roberts or maybe picks from Dutch's great list)  is always a hit. As a bonus, maybe it's a way to push the Wiggles out of our collective consciousness. First step, a birthday party favor bag, next step the world!
  • Jan suggested a candy bar tied up with a video rental card. I suggest telling Jan she's a genius.
  • Spring said they'd be giving party goers a foil balloon at the end of the party. During the party the balloons will be decorations. My five year old would pass out with the joy of a foil balloon all his own. Maybe you could tie on a bottle of bubbles as a weight for your balloon for an extra treat, as Elsimom suggested. (Add a sticker from your home printer and make it custom.)
  • Kathleen offered up this stroke of genius from her son's last party, a paperback book about baseball with a Babe Ruth bar tied on top, her son called them 'Goodie Books'. You could play around with the book and candy combination based on your own party theme.
  • Bonnie likes to give away coloring pages and a small set of crayons. You can find printing pages at NickJr.com and on the internet. She also likes to make scented play-dough (with Kool-Aid)(who knew?) for the kids to take home.
  • My son went to a birthday party this weekend where the guests made their own pizza and ice cream sundaes. The host purchased aprons from the craft store over a couple of months watching for sales and collecting coupons from friends. She then customized them with iron on transfer paper and a computer (here's a decent tutorial). That was their 'goody bag', far more useful than a bag of junk, but still really fun for the kids, and still around $5 per child.

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