Stuffed with child’s love
Marisa O’Neil
Saturday morning, they were a heap of vanilla-white faux fur and
plastic amber-hued eyes.
By the end of the day, 200 freshly-stuffed teddy bears filled a
box at Fashion Island’s Build-A-Bear workshop, ready to be shipped to
young tsunami victims.
The first 200 bear-makers at each of the chain’s stores worldwide
got a free chance to participate in Project Bearlift, part of the
company’s annual Stuffed With Hugs event. This year’s project will
send 40,000 bears to displaced and needy children in Maldives, Sri
Lanka, Myanmar and India.
Kylie Nishisaka, 9, and her sister Morgan, 6, were the first in
line to make their bears.
“We decided it was a nice thing to do for the children over
there,” said their mother, Huntington Beach resident Aileen
Nishisaka.
As Kylie and Morgan carefully signed their names in crayon on the
giant donation box, 10-year-old Francesca Trane and sister Natalie,
5, both of Newport Beach, deposited their bears.
“We love stuffed animals,” Francesca said. “And we knew people
actually needed them. This will give them something to do.”
Francesca and Natalie each helped stuff a specially-designed
“Stuffed With Hugs” bear, which is not for sale. They tucked a
red-satin heart inside and fluffed it at a “bathing” station. Then
each signed her name to a tag on the bears’ ears and dropped them in
the box.
But even with all the care and effort put into it, they didn’t
mind that their new bears wouldn’t be going home with them.
“I already have three at my house,” Francesca confided.
“We’re not allowed to get any more,” Natalie added.
Parents usually prepare their children ahead of time during bear
donations so they don’t suffer separation anxiety when they leave the
animals behind, store manager Julie Nakashima said.
“They realize that this is a special animal and it’s going to
someone who’s lost their toys and maybe their home,” she said.
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