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- Lemon Loves Lime red shrug
Lemon Loves Lime red shrug
SKU:
$29.99
$29.99
Unavailable
per item
These adorable shrugs feel as soft as velvet and are just the right amount of ruffles to dress up any outfit and bring celebration style to add to your little princess's daily flashing smiles...
This froufrou design is sooooo fun you may just have to purchase one in each size to keep your princess in style as she grows.
Limited sizes:
3 - 6 months
6 - 12 months
12 - 18 months
Material 97% polyester, 3% spandex
Our "clothes out specials" are always limited offerings, so get them while the getting is good ;)
The above price includes free shipping in the contiguous (lower 48 adjoining states plus Washington, D.C.) of the U.S.A.
This froufrou design is sooooo fun you may just have to purchase one in each size to keep your princess in style as she grows.
Limited sizes:
3 - 6 months
6 - 12 months
12 - 18 months
Material 97% polyester, 3% spandex
Our "clothes out specials" are always limited offerings, so get them while the getting is good ;)
The above price includes free shipping in the contiguous (lower 48 adjoining states plus Washington, D.C.) of the U.S.A.
According to Miriam Webster's Dictionary: So what is froufrou? Did You Know?
Nineteenth-century Europe featured a lot of sophisticated fashions-especially in Paris, a city considered by many to be the fashion capital of the world. Women's dresses were often made of drooping layers of fabric (such as satin or silk) that rustled as the women moved around, and "froufrou" was the French word coined in imitation of the sound they made. The word made its first appearance in English in 1870 as a noun meaning "rustling." It later came to mean "ostentatious decoration," and its usage expanded beyond the world of fashion to other crafts such as architecture and interior design. These days it also shows up as the adjective frou-frou, meaning "very heavily decorated and fancy," as in "frou-frou designs."
Nineteenth-century Europe featured a lot of sophisticated fashions-especially in Paris, a city considered by many to be the fashion capital of the world. Women's dresses were often made of drooping layers of fabric (such as satin or silk) that rustled as the women moved around, and "froufrou" was the French word coined in imitation of the sound they made. The word made its first appearance in English in 1870 as a noun meaning "rustling." It later came to mean "ostentatious decoration," and its usage expanded beyond the world of fashion to other crafts such as architecture and interior design. These days it also shows up as the adjective frou-frou, meaning "very heavily decorated and fancy," as in "frou-frou designs."