It happens one pair of pajamas at a time
It happens quietly. One winter morning, you fold the laundry and realize the kids’ pajamas that fit perfectly last year are now high-water pants. The cuffs don’t reach the wrists. The moose on the shirt looks a little stretched. And it hits you all at once:
They’ve grown again.
It’s time for the next size up.
Another soft, cozy reminder that childhood moves fast. And just like that, something simple — buying new pajamas — becomes something tender. A small, happy way of marking time during your Estes Park seasons.
The measure of a year
You can chart a childhood in a hundred ways: school pictures, pencil marks on the doorframe, another pair of shoes outgrown before summer. But there’s something sweet about doing it through pajamas — especially the ones worn during the quiet, heart-of-the-home hours. The movie nights. The snowy days. The sleepy “five more minutes” mornings in a cabin. Pajamas become the soft background of growing up, especially here in the mountains. And each pair tells its own story. The year they were obsessed with foxes. The year they declared they were “too big for feeties.” The summer trip to Estes Park when they picked out their own silly moose print. Tiny stories sewn into flannel and cotton.
If you keep the old pairs, they form a little archive of their own — a stack of flannel pajamas that reads like chapters of childhood. Smaller sleeves. Faded mountain prints. Buttons you remember struggling to fasten during a winter storm. You can almost measure time in threads. In a world where everything moves fast, flannel is stubbornly loyal. It holds warmth and memory the same way — gently, and for a long time.
The warmth you can hold onto
There’s a special kind of comfort in realizing that some things never stop fitting — not physically, but emotionally. The prints change. The sizes change. But the meaning doesn’t. Buying new Lazy One pajamas in Estes Park isn’t just a tradition. It’s a timeline. A soft, wearable way of watching your kids grow while holding onto the moments that matter.
So here’s to the next size up. To the kids who outgrow their sleeves but not their laughter. To the families who keep showing up, year after year, for one more cozy night together — whether it’s here in downtown Estes Park or back home where the memories travel with them. They don’t stay small for long. But the memories — like the flannel — will last.










