Disclosure: This is a sponsored conversation written by me on behalf of Bright Star Kids. The opinions and text are all mine.
My kids started school this week and after weeks of slowly picking up school supplies and the groceries for school lunches, I thought I was ready. Then I re-read the school supply list and realized my 2nd grader needed some of his supplies labeled with his name. Previous years all the school supplies were shared so this was something new to me.
My husband asked me how I was going to label them and I didn’t really know. I knew I had a label printer somewhere but then I’d have to find that and I had no clue if I even had label paper in it. Such a pain!
Here is my list of 10 things you should definitely label for your kids:
- Coats and hoodies
- Shoes (especially at winter time when your child will probably wear boots and bring their gym shoes)
- Backpack
- Lunch tote
- Water bottle
- Headphones (my boys need to bring headphones for the learning lab at school)
- Books
- Calculator or any other tech item they bring
- Pencils, Pens and Crayons
- Scissors
I hate having to buy supplies again because my boy’s first set went missing. I am hoping that labeling their supplies gives me more assurance that I won’t have to re-buy stuff.
Bright Star Kids is a company that makes it easy to label your kids items for back to school. They are a company too that knows parents like to save at back to school time.
By using the promo code LABELS on orders over $30, consumers can save 15% store wide and receive free shipping!
How are their prices? One example is the Bright Star Kids school labels value kit where you get 175 labels for less than $40 when the 15% discount code is applied. You get to choose the name to personalize it, color, font and icon. Once your done you can even preview your creation. To me 175 is more than enough and I am thinking of just personalizing some labels with our last name so all three of my kids can use them! You get a variety of labels perfect for whatever size your item needs are.
This is a sponsored conversation written by me on behalf of Bright Star Kids. The opinions and text are all mine.
Leave a Reply