Nearly there. Will it be a wonderful onesie Christmas in your neighborhood? Actress Sienna Miller is one fan of sleepwear gifts. “I love getting pajamas – I buy people what I like to get. I gave everybody pajamas last year that were really beautiful and I think make women feel kind of special…” she said in a recent interview. And there are already plenty of Instagram pics of stars in holiday-themed pajamas. From Canada, we enjoyed this post about how multi-cultural Canadians celebrate Christmas with the title “Wieners and onesies among many ways to celebrate the holiday season”.
This is the time of year for looking back and reviewing what happened in 2016 and looking forward to what we might expect in 2017. For lovers of Queens and Princes, Yahoo offered us the best Royal family moments of 2016 including that cute picture of Prince George meeting President Obama in his pajamas (Prince George not the president was in their pajamas). The Australian got in early with this article “Trends you missed: from pajamas and Pokemon to butler socks.” This includes the fashion trend for wearing pajamas in public and the fact that for babies born in 2016, Noah was No 4 in Australia and No 1 for boys names in the USA. Back at home, news emerged that early in the 2016 Ryder Cup, the American team had a meeting to pay tribute to one of its assistant captains — Tiger Woods. No pics are available but apparently all members of the team gathered in red, white and blue onesies. On a signal, all 12 players stood up, removed their onesies, and revealed a T-shirt, with the message “Make Tiger Great Again.”
Looking ahead, there are predictions that both Christmas Day and Boxing Day will be significant days for shopping using mobile devices. One leading retailer reported that 75% of clearance shopping traffic on Christmas Day came from mobile devices. Over half of all Christmas day mobile purchases are people buying for themselves to get the gift that Santa forgot. So if it wasn’t a wonderful onesie Christmas for you, get on our site and order a funzee for yourself. And as a further sign of things to come Amazon this month made its first delivery by drone – in the UK. CEO Jeff Bezos tweeted that the delivery had taken just 13 minutes from click to the parcel arriving. The ground breaking delivery took place in the UK within six months of their Civil Aviation Authority agreeing to work with Amazon to trial the use of drones to deliver parcels weighing up to 2.3kg. It granted permission that went beyond the US’s Federal Air Authority, which insisted testing must be in the line of sight.