Sunday Summary: 7/31/11

House detail II

House detail II by tillwe via Flickr

Happy fifth Sunday in July!  Pardon the later-than-usual summary – I was outside in the sweltering summer heat, watching a base ball game played by 1861 rules.  (Nope, that’s not a typo, either – in 1861, base ball was two words.)  I resisted the urge to mentally re-name all of the players with nineteenth-century appropriate appellations, though the league manager was a 20-something guy called Howard.

Back to the present day.  Nameberry generated oodles of chatter this week with their Hottest Names of 2011.  Among the reactions, here’s the one that I found most intriguing:  Melissa of Dear Baby shared her reaction at Babble.  The list, you see, included Arlo – the name of Melissa’s newborn son.  Her family also includes a daughter called Everly, a name that has generated quite a bit of buzz.

I’ve been thinking about the exact problem that she names.  Many a message board comment reads something like this: “When we picked Ava in 2005, no one was using it!”  That’s not so, of course – Ava was already in the Top Ten in 2005.  Ava’s mom found a name she loved – a great name, really – but expected everyone else to steer clear once she’d claimed it.  Irrational, at best.

Melissa’s problem is a little different.  She strikes me as quite stylish, so no wonder her kids’ names are very much in vogue.  But they’re not actually chart-toppers; in fact neither is currently in the US Top 1000.  But now that they’re anointed as wildly fashionable monikers will they climb quickly?  Will all those parents looking for an alternative to Avery embrace Everly?  When your best friend announces that she’s naming her baby Leo, will you cast about for another ends-in-o option and settle on Arlo?  Would we have arrived at those names on our own, or is their amped-up profiles that make us consider them?  In the absence of the charts and articles and analysis, would we choose, say, Bellamy and Hugo, instead?

Elsewhere online:

  • More on Lucifer, this time from the wayback machine, courtesy of British Baby Names;
  • Bewitching Names featured Parvati, a lovely Harry Potter choice;
  • For Real spotted a baby BriscoLaw & Order fans, maybe?  Rest in peace, Jerry Orbach;
  • BBC deejay Jo Whiley’s kids’ names take center stage at Mer de Noms – and really, they’re great – India remains one of my long-time favorites.  I love the idea of twin daughters called India and Verity;
  • Are you following Nook of Names’ surname series?  I love so many of these – Ashby and Bessemer and Brooker and Ayre
  • Nancy asks if a racing star is driving the rise of Jenson in the UK;
  • Hawaii just fascinates me.  If I visited, I would head immediately from the airport to a regular ol’ playground and listen to parents calling their kids’ names.  A boy Raven, a girl called Zollie Mae.

In celebrity news:

  • Selma Blair welcomed a son called Arthur Saint, and name nerds everywhere swooned.  Still no backstory on Saint, though;
  • Did you know Kevin Federline is expecting baby #5, his first with new girlfriend Victoria Prince?  They revealed the name: daughter Jordan will join half-siblings Kori, Kaleb, Jayden, and Preston.  Not my favorite names, but I will say this – they sound like a family, not a random collection of children.  There’s something to be said for that.

There should be a few more high-profile arrivals this summer, and I can’t wait to hear what Jessica Alba, Tina Fey, and January Jones choose for their little ones.

In other news, this has been, far and away, my most successful month in terms of traffic.  I appreciate each and every visit!

Baby Name of the Day: Ever

Big "E"

Big "E" by Orin Zebest via Flickr

Milla Jovovich said it was a boy’s name when she used it for her daughter.  Alanis Morrisette gave the name to her son without explanation.

Thanks to Pat for suggesting the intriguing Ever as our Baby Name of the Day.

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Sunday Summary: 8/29/10

My week at the beach was spent listening for names (well, there was ice cream and sand and a giant waterslide called the Hippo) but I didn’t hear much.  There was a Veronica nicknamed Vera, but mostly it was the pleasant Top 100 assortment of Ethan, Dylan, Emma, Riley, Noah, Chloe, Caleb, Jackson, Zachary, Ellie, and the like.  I also heard a girl called Cooper and another girl named Gracen or Graycen or maybe Gracyn.  Thanks for checking out Rerun Week while I was slathering on sunscreen!

In the meantime, a new neighbor has arrived and her kids names?  Be still my heart: Nella and Arlo.  I haven’t actually met them (she joined a listserv for local moms) but I might hug her.

Also in the real world, the incredibly talented Brooke at Dinkypopsnomore is now mom to two!  The incredibly photogenic, more-stylish-at-3-than-I-am-at-37 Temperance is big sister to Verity BlytheSee the post about her name here.

Elsewhere online:

In starbaby news:

  • Let’s hear it for the double palindrome power of Ava Katherine Otto, a new daughter for country singer James Otto and wife Amy;
  • Actor Matt Walton – he plays Eli on One Life To Live – has an Ava, too, plus a brand new son called Greyson James.  Greyson is the new Jayden. Add up all the boys called Greyson and Grayson, plus the girls wearing a variant of sound-alike Gracen, and you have the formula for a gender-neutral, hard-to-gauge usage name that every parent thinks is uncommon.  Too bad, because I do love Gray;
  • Army Wives’ Catherine Bell has a new son called Ronan, a little sister for Gemma.  That’s a nice sibset, a pair of names that are underused, but not outlandish;
  • And the big news is the birth of Florence Rose Endellion, a daughter for UK Prime Minister David Cameron, his wife Samantha, and three older siblings: the late Ivan, plus Nancy, and Arthur Elwen.  For a humorous and insightful look on place names popping up on birth certificates, there’s this News & Star column. Capri and Dublin, yes.  St. Bees Flimby Pie?  Probably not;
  • Lastly, the best use of Twitter for baby naming since Erykah Badu live-tweeted the birth of her third child and claimed she was calling her Twittymilk surely goes to Neil Patrick Harris’ twins teaser. That’s an instant sibset I can’t wait to learn.

As always, thanks for reading!

Baby Name of the Day: Eva

Eve had her turn in the spotlight, and Ava needs no introduction.  But what of their cousin?

Thanks to Melissa for suggesting Eva as Baby Name of the Day.

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Sunday Summary: 12/13/09

Christmas may still be almost two weeks away.  But this Sunday, I’m all abuzz about year-end name news:

Speaking of unusual names:

In starbaby news:

Is it me, or is it more fun when celebs don’t release their baby names while their offspring are still in utero?  Don’t get me wrong, I’ll take a baby name announcement whenever it comes.  (Is Pilot’s little sister really named Casper?  Inquiring minds want to know.)  But I kind of enjoy the whole “So and So Had a Girl and Named Her Guess What?” part of the process.

Perhaps I’ve been conditioned by reality television’s big reveals.

Thanks for reading – have a great week!

Starbaby Round-Up: Adele, Roman, Holden and More

I just can’t wait ’til Sunday!  A few starbaby names popped up in the past few days:

  • Molly Ringwald has welcomed twins Adele Georgiana and Roman Stylianos. They join big sis Mathilda Ereni at home.  I’ve loved Molly since Pretty in Pink, and I like her naming style.  And yet, may I just say – bring on the Addies!  Between Addison, Adeline and Adele, I can hear a wave of little girls answering to this nickname.  Guess I’d better cross Adelaide off my list …
  • Mira Sorvino has welcomed her third, son Holden Paul Terry, a little brother for Johnny Christopher King and Mattea Angel.  I think Mira rocks, but her style seems unpredictable – if I didn’t know Johnny, Mattea and Holden were sibs, I’d assume they were three unrelated kids;
  • I missed this one – Twilight star Cam Gigandet welcomed a daughter named Everleigh Ray back in April.  What a difference a spelling makes – I think Everly is an appealing surname pick for a daughter, a sort of mix of the last-names-first-name trend, the nouveau virtue/noun name choices (think Journey, Destiny, Ever) and the love of the letter “v” in names like Ava, Ivy and Eve.  But the “leigh” spelling?  I think that reduces the name’s style.  And in the middle spot?  Ray is the new Rose.

Did I miss anyone?