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New cellphone-inspired baby-clothes packaging

April 3, 2009

Baby clothes maker Text Message Baby has enhanced its line of clever cellphone inspired baby duds with — yep you guessed it – packaging that looks like a cellphone.

It’s pretty cute, really. Here’s what the company has to say about it:

Text Message Baby announces new product packaging for its trendy and eco-friendly baby apparel. Their bright and colorful onesies which feature fun text messaging graphics and whimsical emoticons, are now being shipped to customers in an adorable box made in the shape of a cell phone. This creative package is made with 100% recycled paper and printed with soy-based inks which makes it as eco-friendly as the product it carries. All of Text Message Baby’s products are made with 100% certified organic cotton fibers.

Owner Carla Dickinson is excited to offer the new packaging which brings the company’s vision to life. "After all, what is text messaging without a cell phone?" she said. "Each box flips open to reveal our text messaging organic onesies, along with information about our company. We hope our customers will be as thrilled about our new packaging as we are."

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Posted by David Bellm on April 3, 2009 | Comments (3)
Industries: Packaging Concepts

September 8, 2009
In response to: New cellphone-inspired baby-clothes packaging
hasulam commented:

I apologise, but, in my opinion, you are not right. Write to me in PM, we will talk.


July 10, 2009
In response to: New cellphone-inspired baby-clothes packaging
Confused commented:

Not sure what religion has to do with cell phone baby clothes...


July 5, 2009
In response to: New cellphone-inspired baby-clothes packaging
degaitspierie commented:

Hello! The Myth of a Judeo-Christian Tradition This is an age in which news has been superseded by propaganda, and education by brain-washing and indoctrination. From the advertising used to sell poor quality goods, to the classes in schools designed to make children into conditioned robots of the State, the art of persuasion has displaced the simple virtue of truth. Since the end of the Second World War we have been bombarded from all sides with references to the Western world's "Judeo-Christian religion," and "our Judeo-Christian heritage." We are told by both church leaders and scholars that our society is based on a supposed "Judeo-Christian tradition". The notion of "Judeo-Christian religion" is an unquestioned -- almost sacrosanct -- part of both secular and church thinking. American Christian leader Prof. Franklin H. Littel, a vocal supporter of the Zionist state, frankly declared that "to be Christian is to be Jewish," and that consequently it was the duty of a Christian to put support for the "land of Israel" above all else. Pat Boon, the North American singer and evangelist, said there are two kinds of Judaism, one Orthodox and the other Christian. Yet such a decidedly Christian Zionist outlook is to say the least, wildly simplistic and profoundly ahistorical. As the astute Jewish writer, Joshua J. Adler, points out, "The differences between Christianity and Judaism are much more than merely believing in whether the messiah already appeared or is still expected, as some like to say." The comments of Jewish author Mr. S. Levin may well explain the Christian's need for the Judeo-Christian myth. Writing in the Israeli journal Biblical Polemics, Levin concludes: "'After all, we worship the same God', the Christian always says to the Jew and the Jew never to the Christian. The Jew knows that he does not worship the Christ-God but the Christian orphan needs to worship the God of Israel and so, his standard gambit rolls easily and thoughtless

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