Advertisement

Keep Your Shirt On

Share

Most of the new baby-boom products that have arrived on the market in the past few years have been invented by frustrated parents.

They have included doughnut-shaped bottles, brightly-colored diaper covers and, now, this invention by Encino mom Judy Ryder: The Little Shirt Anchor.

Annoyed by how her baby daughter’s shirts kept bunching up under her armpits, Ryder fiddled with a contraption that would clip onto the bottom edge of the shirt front, stretch through her legs and clip again at the back.

Advertisement

“The hardest thing was finding the right fastener. I definitely didn’t want metal or anything so simple that a 2-year-old could figure it out after watching it done.”

She settled on a garter grip. “When someone suggested it, I laughed, but it really works.”

The Little Shirt Anchor has two grips on the front and two on the back of the shirt and attaches them with a Velcro tab at the crotch. The contraption is adjustable for all sizes of diaper-wearers, as well as different-length shirts. The clips stay in place during diaper changes; only the Velcro tab is undone.

Ryder made up 150 free samples, which she passed out with a questionnaire. With those comments, she made refinements and took her invention to a May baby fair. She has sold 800 so far.

The Little Shirt Anchor is available at Brontsema’s Baby News in Northridge and Woodland Hills for $4.95, in white, pink and blue.

Advertisement