Friday, January 1, 2010


Starting January 1st 2010 Flower Girl Princess is running a new contest untill January 15th! Any one who posts a comment or message to this blog post will qualify to win any girls dress valued at 54.99 or less. Browse our little girls dress collection. Tell us your most memorable accomplishment that you achieved as a child and bam!..you are automatically entered. We will choose the most heart warming story and notify you by email. One winner will receive an email gift certificate and all you need to do is find the prettiest little darling flower girl dress listed on our site. What are you waiting for? We want to hear your story.....

7 comments:

  1. The most memorable accomplishment I can remember is singing a solo in Elementary School! I could hardly get the words out, but my dad was so proud of me for trying!! I love the Little Girls Dress collection, picking a favorite is impossible!

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  2. My grandmother passed away when I was 10 years old. Several weeks after her passing, I composed a song in her memory recalling favorite memories with my Grammy. This song was a source of comfort for me in the coming years--whenever I missed her, I would sing it to myself and remember the time we spent together. This was my greatest childhood accomplishment and remains the only song I have ever written--it would be hard to top.

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  3. My most memorable accomplishment as a child was the defining moment when I went from being a shy little girl to the young lady who speaks up for what she believes in. I grew up in a small town where the closest city was two hours away. A little ballerina, I had always dreamed of being in the Nutcracker Ballet with all the principle dancers at the prestigious city dance school. My mother drove me two hours to audition for the ballet, and my heart skipped a beat as I saw all the beautiful, older ballerinas around me; the ones I aspired to be like when I grew up. I auditioned alongside them (nerves and all!) and went home with my mother awaiting a phone call to let me know if I had made the cut. I never heard anything, so for the first time, I picked up the phone and called the ballet school (with mom's help, of course) to follow up. The ballet teacher got the list, and sure enough, I was on it! I had the role of a little mouse! As it turned out, my acceptance letter got lost in the mail (it later arrived with the wrong zip code on it), and I never would have known I made The Nutcracker if I didn't call to follow up. It took guts, but it all paid off when that December, I danced alongside some of my greatest heroes. I will never forget the butterflies I felt in my stomach, the applause as we all took our final bow, or the reward of stepping up to the plate for the first time in my entire life.

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  4. I think my proudest accomplishment as a little girl was making supper for my entire family when I was 7. I was in the kitchen all day making a roast, Yorkshire pudding and spinach salad for my family of 6 under the watchful eyes of my great grandmother, I also made strawberry shortcake for desert. I remember bring supper to the table for my hungry family and hearing how good everyone thought it was and I was proud. I knew then that I wanted to learn more about cooking so I could always get that reaction out of people. I learned if you put love and hard work into something it shows.

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  5. I really like the White Organza Gown with Black Beading.

    As a 6th grader, I was lucky enough to audition for the high school musical. Middle schoolers were allowed to audition, but never got speaking parts. I had never been nervous singing and dancing in front of people... until I was put on the stage with three high school girls for my audition. My heart was racing, but I danced my heart out and made sure I was projecting my voice throughout the auditorium. My heart raced again when I went to look at the results. Imagine my delight when I found that I had not only made it, but had a small speaking part! It was only two short lines, but I was able to stay up front with the leads for half of a song, plus a refrain. I thought I had made the big time!

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  6. As a fifth grader I had the chance to play a solo of away in a manager at the christmas program on my Saxaphone. My mom and dad were scared because every time I practiced at home it was horrible. Well when the time came my teacher just reminded me to have confidence in myself. Well I remember what he told me and did. When I played my song it was beautiful and my mother and father could not of been prouder. That was the day I realized having confidence in yourself can make things much better.

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  7. Ice skating and winning the competition. I was so nervous and even messed up a bit at the end, yet i still won first place!

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