Most shoppers make a quick pit-stop in the garden section before heading inside on their Trader Joe’s run, and you’ll definitely want to now that fall products are arriving. On a trip this weekend, our editors spied a spooky and sweet new succulent: baby toe’s!

Known officially as Fenestraria Rhopalophyllathese potted succulents grow in individual stems that look oddly enough like adorable baby toes that you love to nibble. The pretty plants come in brightly colored porcelain pots and are perfect for the spooky season (because baby toes not attached to a baby foot are the stuff of nightmares).

The petite plant is easy to care for, just needing a lot of sun and water when the soil becomes dry. You can also easily propagate if you’d like a total garden of baby toes, which could be the ideal way to scare your neighbors this Halloween.

You’ll find the potted succulents in the usual garden section of your local Trader Joe’s during the fall season for less than $5.

––Karly Wood

 

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With the start of school just around the corner, and virtual classes still going strong, it’s time to up your online game with Zoom backgrounds that help kids show their city spirit. They can support local sports teams, feature their favorite zoo animal, even turn back the clock with playful screenscapes you won’t find anywhere else. Find your favorite to download.

Seattle Kraken

nhl.com

Release the Kraken! Our newest sports team hasn't even played their first game yet, but your hockey fan can show their spirit with these backgrounds anytime.

Seattle Center

seattlecenter.com

How would your kid like to Zoom next to Spidey, Kermit or the famous tower of guitars at MoPOP? Or show their science love with PacSci backgrounds? You’ll find those and more with these Seattle Center backgrounds.

Seattle Seahawks

seahawks.com

Because every kid needs a virtual twelfie, download one of these pics before your next chat with the grandparents or virtual birthday party.

Woodland Park Zoo

zoo.org

Animals lovers of all ages will go wild for these zoo animal shots featuring some of your Woodland Park Zoo favorites.

Old Seattle

seattle.gov

From the Kingdome explosion to one of the monorail's first rides, these historic city of Seattle pics will add extra learning to whatever meeting you’re in.

Seattle Opera

seattleopera.org

These stills from past Seattle Opera shows put your kiddo center stage, no matter what class they’re in.

University of Washington

washington.edu

Got a future Huskie in your house? You’ll love these backgrounds that highlight all things purple and gold including UW’s campus (hello, cherry blossoms) and furry mascot.

Seattle Mariners

mlb.com

Sitting in the stands might be on hold, but M’s fans can get in the game with these digital backgrounds that celebrate baseball.

Crystal Mountain

crystalmountainresort.com

Live like the mountain is out with Crystal Mountain’s Zoom backgrounds that showcase Mt. Rainier. Ski slopes, gondola, wild flowers. They’ve got ‘em all.

SAM

seattleartmuseum.org

Let the Seattle Art Museum help your Little add character to a Zoom class with cool backgrounds like the Olympic Sculpture Park, Sammy the Camel, the Porcelain Tea Room and more.

 

Seattle Sounders FC

soundersfc.com

Get your scarves up with these sporty stills that feature players, Century Link stadium and fans.

Seattle Skyline

Paul Galasso via pixabay

Seattle’s got one of the best city skylines around. Water, Wheel, Space Needle—there’s no competition. Download city backgrounds from South Seattle College or this water taxi crossing; they’re as Seattle as it gets.

—Allison Sutcliffe

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Planning an Easter celebration to remember just got easier. Get your family excited for springtime with baskets filled with candy and adorable table settings guaranteed to bring the bunny to your door. Childhood memories of reading classic Beatrix Potter tales such as Peter Rabbit will come back to life with these charming collections from Pottery Barn and Pottery Barn Kids

Beatrix Potter™ Tight Fit Pajama

Beatrix Potter™ Tight Fit Pajama
Pottery Barn

This pajama set featuring the enchanting illustrations of Beatrix Potter. Supremely soft and made of pure cotton, the cozy set includes a pullover top and elastic-waist bottoms. 
Retails for $39.50. 

Beatrix Potter™ Cork Placemat

Beatrix Potter™ Cork Placemat
Pottery Barn

These charming storybook-themed placemats showcase illustrations from the classic tales of Beatrix Potter™.Made without BPA or lead, your family's dining space will be as safe as it is stylish.

Retails for $12.50.

Peter Rabbit™ Easter Basket Liners

This sweet Easter basket liner features Peter Rabbit and friends frolicking in the garden. Have your child’s name embroidered above the sweet storybook scene to create a keepsake your family will enjoy for years to come.

Retails for $19.50-$24.40.

Beatrix Potter™ Ceramic Plate Set

Beatrix Potter™ Ceramic Plate Set
Pottery Barn

This ceramic plate set, features sweet illustrations from the classic tale by Beatrix Potter™. Sturdily crafted from porcelain, they are dishwasher-safe and durable.

Retails for $59.50.

Beatrix Potter™ Gingham Egg Chairbacker

Pottery Barn

This Gingham Egg Chairbacker adds a bit of whimsy to your dining room. Featuring a sweet illustration from the classic tale by Beatrix Potter™, it will make mealtimes more playful and spirited. 

Retails for $19.50

Easter Bunny Wreath

Easter Bunny Wreath
Pottery Barn

Made of natural twig woven over iron, with grass, Styrofoam and sisal. This wreath features a bunny peeking through to delight everyone who comes through your door. 

Retails for $59.

 

Pom Pom Bunny Pillow Cover

Pottery Barn

This sherpa pillow cover features an adorable cottontail bunny. The pom-pom adds to its whimsical charm. This pillowcase accommodates a 20" square insert (sold separately).

Retails for $55.50.

 

—Jennifer Swartvagher  

Photos courtesy of Pottery Barn

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Tea time just got a royal makeover––a Disney royal makeover, that is. Pottery Barn Kid’s Disney Princess Tea set is an absolute dream!

The Porcelain Princess Tea Set from Pottery Barn Kids features a tea pot with lid and four cup and saucer sets. Each one features a different Disney Princess including Ariel, Belle, Cinderella and Jasmine. It makes the perfect companion set to Target’s Disney Princess dinnerware collection.

The cups and saucers are all gold-rimmed with gold accent handles. Each one is a different pastel color with the name of the princess hand-painted on the side and artwork painted on the inside.

The tea set is recommended for kids ages eight and up and it’s not hard to see why, considering how delicate they look. This is definitely a pretend play favorite your kids will cherish for years to come.

The entire set is available for $79 at Pottery Barn Kids online.

—Shahrzad Warkentin

All photos: Pottery Barn Kids

 

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Something magical is about to hit your dinner table! Fans of the Wizarding World rejoice, because Target has a Harry Potter-themed porcelain dishware set!

Not only does the big red bullseye retailer have one Potter-inspired set, but the store actually sells several different options (all made by the brand Seven20).

Slytherin 16-Piece Dinnerware Set

Harry Potter enthusiasts can eat their dinners off these snake-themed house of Slytherin ($78.99) plates—plus bowl and mugs too!

Ravenclaw 16-Piece Dinnerware Set

With 16 porcelain pieces, this magical set features Ravenclaw's eagle mascot and house colors ($78.99).

Gryffindor 16-Piece Dinnerware Set

If Gryffindor is your fam's fave, this 16-piece dinnerware set is the perfect pick ($78.99).

House Hufflepuff 16-Piece Dinnerware Set

One of four stylish sets, this pick ($78.99) features s Hufflepuff design.

Harry Potter Marauder Map

This 16-piece set ($199.99) includes four dinner plates, four salad plates, four bowls and four mugs and features the film franchise's Marauder's Map design.

—Erica Loop

Photos: Target

 

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Looking to update your home decor with some fresh vibes? Then you’ll want to check out all the new offerings from Target’s spring home collections! Now that warmer weather is upon us, Target’s signature brands like Opalhouse, Threshold and Project 62 have all revamped their lineups to signify the arrival of light and airy styles, bright colors and an emphasis on natural materials.

We’ve rounded up our fave finds and you can shop each collection by scrolling through!

Opalhouse Living Room Accents

When it comes to combining spring cleaning with style, Opalhouse has you covered. This season's finds include lots of natural textures like water hyacinth baskets, terracotta vases and even a gold bell bunting to add just the right amount of style to your bohemian look.

Also featured:

Get the entire look for under $270.

Easter Tablescapes from Threshold

When it comes to hosting this Easter, Threshold has you covered. The home brand is sprucing up their serving-ware with all things spring-related. With purple checked tablecloths, pink egg platters and bunny candy dishes, the delicate lineup of dishes and hosting essentials is a must this year.

Also featured:

Score this gorgeous tablescape for $160.

Modern Pastel Bedroom from Project 62

Dusty pinks and warm clays come together in what could be the ultimate homage to spring feels. Project 62's Mesa Collection is big on modern and comfort, and with pieces like a hammered drum accent, stoneware planters and pink-toned round mirror, this lineup is huge on style but won't break the bank.

Also featured:

Freshen your guest room for under $300.

Bohemian Candle Tablescape Collection

This spring, Target's boho brand Opalhouse has released gorgeous new Bohemian-inspired candles. Shop from 16 fragrances poured into beautiful vintage-inspired glassware in lovely fragrances like Moroccan Moon ($12). You can also shop tin candles starting as low as $6 to get the fresh spring air flowing.

––Karly Wood

 

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Folks, this is serious business when traveling abroad. This issue can cause great embarrassment when visiting a local in their home. It constantly perplexes my six-year-old. It confuses the foreigner who doesn’t read the local language. It delves into the issue of societal norms we take for granted at home, but are hesitant to discuss when traveling abroad.

Namely: where do you put used toilet paper?

To many, the obvious answer is “in the toilet.” But the white porcelain throne with modern sewage and three-ply-soft-as-cotton-toilet paper is not the global standard. Rule 1: when traveling abroad you must be prepared for the many variations of toilet paper etiquette you might encounter. 

Staying overnight with guests in rural Romania, our host showed us around the house and mentioned we should not put toilet paper in their toilet. In Romania, that’s normal. Not a problem—until decades of habit kicked in and I just dropped the paper in the bowl and flushed. Moments later, the system backed up.

This is not a case of TMI. You need to know that even toilet paper used for going a little Number One can back up a system not designed for processed wood products. Just don’t do it!  Follow the stated or written instructions. The owner of the toilet, if they have instructed you to put paper in the bin, is expecting to see dirty paper in the bin. Call it a cultural experience or whatever you need to call it, but put it in the bin so your host doesn’t have to perform the worse of two evils and clean up an overflowing toilet.

After months of living in Romania, my oldest asked, at a very nice hotel in Bucharest, if she could put the paper in the toilet. Yes, because Rule 2: unless there is a sign indicating otherwise, at very nice hotels you may put the toilet paper in the toilet. She was hesitant, however. The norm in Romania is toilet paper in the trash bin

Alas, every morning before room service came, our little trash bin was loaded with used toilet paper.  She couldn’t stop the habit of throwing the paper in the bin. Putting it in the toilet was strange.

This may disgust some readers, but let me remind you that an overflowing toilet is much more disgusting than used toilet paper in a trash bin. Use the trash bin provided! If toilet-goers consistently use trash bins, you retain the privilege of wiping with super-soft-mega-ply paper. After all, if the owner of the toilet knows the paper will not be put in the bowl, they aren’t forced to buy membrane-thin-insta-shred TP. This privilege can’t be abused.

In Romania, as in many other parts of the world, remember Rule 3: if you are visiting a home that provides luxurious toilet paper, unless the bathroom is equally luxurious, you can safely assume the paper is not intended to be put in the toilet. Use the bin provided. If the bin is already loaded with toilet paper, you know you’re making the right choice.

(Of course, there’s always the crazy outlier to the rule. Our friends in Romania, who always had very nice toilet paper, have this sign in their bathroom that reads “please put the paper in the toilet.” In this case, Rule 1 applies.)

Sometimes the throne is not porcelain, but a plywood box with a hole a short walking distance from the house (aka, an out-house). Same toilet paper rules apply. The pit in some outhouses is a receptacle for human waste only. It is not a trash can. If you put paper in the pit, it fills up faster and another hole would have to be dug sooner rather than later.

Rule 4: in outhouses, check the pit for paper. If there is no paper in the pit, you are not entitled to dispose of yours in the hole. Use the bin if one is provided.

Then there’s the roadside pit stop, frequently employed in rural areas where gas stations are infrequent or, more frequent than not, unfit for human use. A roadside bush must suffice. In these cases, you must of course bring your own toilet paper. I recommend you Rule 5: always stash a roll at all times in the glove box.

I recall a recent road trip in Namibia. Miles from nowhere, we stopped at a roadside picnic site. With no other option, we had to find a private spot behind a bush for personal business. The bush I selected had been the obvious choice of no less than 100 other people who had stopped by the rest area. Toilet paper fluttered in the bushes and human waste lay strewn about, uncovered and exposed. You can step it up.

While walking to your spot of choice, find a stick to use as a toilet-paper-burying device. Dig a small hole and, when your business is done, remember Rule 6: cover your toilet paper and business with brush, dirt and other natural organic material. You may think you’re in the middle of nowhere, but it is somewhere for someone. Of course, Rule 6 only applies in situations where strict pack-in, pack-out rules are irrelevant.

Recently in a public restroom in the United States, my daughter asked if she could put paper in the toilet. Yes, a thousand times yes. A printed sign on the door caused her confusion. These signs are found across public restrooms in the United States. It was apparent there is something that is not supposed to go in the toilet. If not paper, then what?

I’ll save that explanation for another time. For now, “in America, put paper in the toilet” will suffice.

With four kids ages nine and under, we are always on the move, but currently reside in southern California. I hope to never lose our sense of adventure and awe as we travel around our city and around the world, drinking coffee and discovering playgrounds.