I was going to do cloth until my brother did it first. They are super expensive and then you have to pay for the routine cleaning of them. Plus the day care he put his baby in kept putting them on backwards because no one ever used cloth before him lol. Its too much of a hassle for me so I am going with pampers.
I'm intrigued by the IDEA of using cloth diapers... but it seems so complicated. I spent about 15 minutes at the cloth diapering board before I was totally confused and my head almost flew off. Plus I am disgusted by the thought of poop floating in dirty water.
Amanda
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Nov siggy challenge: animals eating Thanksgiving food
Special snowflake. Higgins. Pampers have DS a major diaper rash and stuck to his bum. I'd love to do cloth but DH was 100% against it and I did not want to do it alone.
pinottoparenthood - You do realize that you dump the solids into the toilet right? Every parent will have their fair share of blowouts that cause soiled clothing to be soaked in a bucket to remove more not-so-solid-solids. You get use to it, and the breastfed baby poo isn't so bad.
If you were to use cloth diapers just part time you could save so much money every month. The start up may look like a lot of money but if you invest $50-100 in diapers at each size you can save $200-400 in disposables. You can also use them with each child or pass them on to someone else. The benefits also include that toddlers potty train an average of 4 months sooner, now that's savings! The environment is a distant 3rd place reason, for why we want to do cloth diapers most of the time.
And if you're handy with a sewing maching or have a surger, you can make them very inexpensively!
We use cloth diapers, and they are very easy once you get your washing/drying routine established. But, we do use pampers overnight as I never wanted to bother with finding one that would be absorbent enough for night time.
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I plan to use cloth (occasional use of disposables for convenience). You may want to post this on the parenting boards to get some input from real-life parents currently using one or the other. Good Luck and congrats!
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Our little lightbulb is on the way! 12 weeks 3 days
TTC since Oct 2011 Me: 33, hypothyroidism since 14, cleared all HSG, US, Pre-pregnancy panel tests.
Hubby: 36, testicular Ca, chemo April-May 2012. Natural cycle IUI #1 with trigger and Progesterone Suppositories (Jun 2012) Neg Natural Cycle IUI #2 with trigger and Progesterone Suppositories (Jul 2012) NEG Aug 2012 - break due to needing a girls' weekend in Cape Cod Natural Cycle IUI #3 with trigger and prednisone (Sep 2012) NEGATIVE Switched fertility clinics - forced break Oct 2012 Natural Cycle IUI #4 (Nov 2012) no trigger, no progesterone, no prednisone (Nov 2012) - Neg 1st round Clomid Cycle IUI #5 (Dec 2012) - POS
We tried cloth with DS, but had nothing but leaks. I really think you need to know someone who does it to help. No one I know uses cloth. Everyone thought I was crazy for trying. We used pampers when he was little and target brand once we hit size 2. FYI, target has a debit card that gives you 5% off everything.
We'll be using a cloth diaper service. Best for baby, best for the environment, and no hassle....no dumping or rinsing diapers, just toss them in the diaper genie (they provide), leave them on the front porch once a week and they drop off clean ones (as many as you need in whatever sizes). They also have a more environmentally-friendly cleaning process (using specialized washers with less water, and come out very clean). It's about $20/week, and we've already been offered by friends and family to buy weeks of diaper service as baby gifts (perfect since most of our families live very far away).
I am going to use the honest company for diapers. They are disposable and good for the environment.
Totally your choice what to use, but I wouldn't say they're "good for the environment." That's completely false. They're disposable. I did my university research on infant diaper sustainability and the economic, environmental, and social implications of using cloth, "green" disposables (like The Honest Company I'm assuming), and traditional disposable diapers. "Green" disposables may not be bleached with dioxin, but there are still a lot of harmful chemicals that contaminate groundwater and can cause health issues.
OP, we've used cloth since we were in the hospital for DD's birth and it's no big deal. None of the four childcare settings DD has been in has struggled with CDs and the cleaning is no big deal. It can be done very affordably. If you're using cloth for the cost savings, I recommend checking out Rainbow BB pocket diapers on Ebay.
Married to my best friend 6/5/10
BFP #1 9/7/10, EDD 5/14/11, Violet born 5/27/11.
BFP #2 4/9/12, EDD 12/16/12, M/C Rory 4/24/12.
BFP #3 10/6/12, EDD 6/16/12., Matilda born 6/17/13.
I CD'd my first two, and will be doing so again this time. For an initial $250 investment, I will have had diapers for three children, just under two years for my daughter, 18 months for my son, and who knows how long for this next baby. I would have spent that in a year on one child.
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I'm intrigued by the IDEA of using cloth diapers... but it seems so complicated. I spent about 15 minutes at the cloth diapering board before I was totally confused and my head almost flew off. Plus I am disgusted by the thought of poop floating in dirty water.
FYI there will be poop in your washer regardless of what you diaper with.
"I wanted you more than you'll ever know, so I sent love to follow wherever you go."
We currently cloth diaper our 2.5 year old and have since birth. We do also use disposables for when we are out of town (mostly because I'm already a heavy packer and it's just one more thing to pack), for the sitter, and overnight. I absolutely adore cloth and really really love the money it has saved us over the years AND that I can use those same diapers again on #2. CDs have a really high resale value too so if you don't like something or are done with it, there are communities you can sell them on and regain some of your investment. You can also buy used and save yourself some more money too.
Everyone has their reason(s) for cloth diapering. Mine is not for the environment, at least that is not at the top of my list. I, like many CD mamas, use them for the money savings, to keep those gross chemicals in disposables off my child's skin (as much as possible), and because they are So. Darn. Cute.
We CDed our first and plan on doing the same for this one. Its so much easier than people think and we've saved a ton of money!
All of this! We have used them with both kids so far and plan to with the next one too. Also, another bonus, cloth diapered kids tend to potty train earlier.
We used cloth until DS was almost two, and then he developed an allergy or eczema or something that wouldn't clear, so we had to switch to Earth's Best. I don't know if it saved money - i was always buying new diapers because they were so cute. And I used all-in-two's, which are one of the more expensive types to buy. It can be done very economically. I think I will CD #2 at least in the beginning when you need to change the diaper every hour or so. I will use prefolds and thirsties covers - those are simple for little babies, and relatively inexpensive. However, I do like to think of all the waste I prevented by using cloth for almost two years.
We cloth diaper but not until they can fit into my one I've pockets/AIOs. Around two or three months. I might do some Prefolds this time from the beginning. Any excuse to buy diapers.
We CDed our first and plan on doing the same for this one. Its so much easier than people think and we've saved a ton of money!
Really, I saw a video on You-tube and it seemed like a lot of things to buy to get started. is that true?
Yeah, it can be pricy up front, but $400 worth of diapers will diaper both of my kids until potty training. Sounds like a savings to me.
Plus you can sell them for at least half, if not 2/3 of the cost what you paid for them once you're all done using them... so you get a lot of that money back if you want to
Re: Cloth diaper vs. Pampers
Ginny DX 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
Charlie DX Specific Antibody Deficiency & ASD
Really, I saw a video on You-tube and it seemed like a lot of things to buy to get started. is that true?
Married since 8/7/10
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Nov siggy challenge: animals eating Thanksgiving food
Rhys - born 04.17.2013
Harry - born 04.18.2016
Special snowflake. Higgins. Pampers have DS a major diaper rash and stuck to his bum. I'd love to do cloth but DH was 100% against it and I did not want to do it alone.
Eff you autocorrect. Huggies!
My BFP Chart
pinottoparenthood - You do realize that you dump the solids into the toilet right? Every parent will have their fair share of blowouts that cause soiled clothing to be soaked in a bucket to remove more not-so-solid-solids. You get use to it, and the breastfed baby poo isn't so bad.
If you were to use cloth diapers just part time you could save so much money every month. The start up may look like a lot of money but if you invest $50-100 in diapers at each size you can save $200-400 in disposables. You can also use them with each child or pass them on to someone else. The benefits also include that toddlers potty train an average of 4 months sooner, now that's savings! The environment is a distant 3rd place reason, for why we want to do cloth diapers most of the time.
And if you're handy with a sewing maching or have a surger, you can make them very inexpensively!
How can anything disposable be GOOD for the environment?
Our little lightbulb is on the way!
12 weeks 3 days
TTC since Oct 2011
Me: 33, hypothyroidism since 14, cleared all HSG, US, Pre-pregnancy panel tests.
Hubby: 36, testicular Ca, chemo April-May 2012.
Natural cycle IUI #1 with trigger and Progesterone Suppositories (Jun 2012) Neg
Natural Cycle IUI #2 with trigger and Progesterone Suppositories (Jul 2012) NEG
Aug 2012 - break due to needing a girls' weekend in Cape Cod
Natural Cycle IUI #3 with trigger and prednisone (Sep 2012) NEGATIVE
Switched fertility clinics - forced break Oct 2012
Natural Cycle IUI #4 (Nov 2012) no trigger, no progesterone, no prednisone (Nov 2012) - Neg
1st round Clomid Cycle IUI #5 (Dec 2012) - POS
Ditto. I love the cleaning and bath products we get from them, and the patterns on the diapers are adorable.
(I voted pampers, since I'm assuming the OP meant that as disposables?)
Totally your choice what to use, but I wouldn't say they're "good for the environment." That's completely false. They're disposable. I did my university research on infant diaper sustainability and the economic, environmental, and social implications of using cloth, "green" disposables (like The Honest Company I'm assuming), and traditional disposable diapers. "Green" disposables may not be bleached with dioxin, but there are still a lot of harmful chemicals that contaminate groundwater and can cause health issues.
OP, we've used cloth since we were in the hospital for DD's birth and it's no big deal. None of the four childcare settings DD has been in has struggled with CDs and the cleaning is no big deal. It can be done very affordably. If you're using cloth for the cost savings, I recommend checking out Rainbow BB pocket diapers on Ebay.
BFP #1 9/7/10, EDD 5/14/11, Violet born 5/27/11.
BFP #2 4/9/12, EDD 12/16/12, M/C Rory 4/24/12.
BFP #3 10/6/12, EDD 6/16/12., Matilda born 6/17/13.
FYI there will be poop in your washer regardless of what you diaper with.
Ginny DX 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
Charlie DX Specific Antibody Deficiency & ASD
Yeah, it can be pricy up front, but $400 worth of diapers will diaper both of my kids until potty training. Sounds like a savings to me.
Ginny DX 21-Hydroxylase Deficiency Congenital Adrenal Hyperplasia
Charlie DX Specific Antibody Deficiency & ASD
We currently cloth diaper our 2.5 year old and have since birth. We do also use disposables for when we are out of town (mostly because I'm already a heavy packer and it's just one more thing to pack), for the sitter, and overnight. I absolutely adore cloth and really really love the money it has saved us over the years AND that I can use those same diapers again on #2. CDs have a really high resale value too so if you don't like something or are done with it, there are communities you can sell them on and regain some of your investment. You can also buy used and save yourself some more money too.
Everyone has their reason(s) for cloth diapering. Mine is not for the environment, at least that is not at the top of my list. I, like many CD mamas, use them for the money savings, to keep those gross chemicals in disposables off my child's skin (as much as possible), and because they are So. Darn. Cute.
We will be using cloth. It is cheaper especially if you don't over do it with the cute diapers that you don't really need and you clean them yourself.
I sew, so I will be making them myself and tweaking them if necessary.
All of this! We have used them with both kids so far and plan to with the next one too. Also, another bonus, cloth diapered kids tend to potty train earlier.
Mom to 4 wonderful children: T(8), B(6) ,M(3), and A(1)
Layne-May 6, 2013
Callie-February 14, 2011
This
Tyler (10/29/08)
and Lily (4/21/13)
Plus you can sell them for at least half, if not 2/3 of the cost what you paid for them once you're all done using them... so you get a lot of that money back if you want to
Tyler (10/29/08)
and Lily (4/21/13)
This. Pampers suck.