How do you decide what type of mattress to get for the crib? When I pick out a mattress test them out, but how do you decide what is best for LO? There are a ton of brands all with varying degrees of "firmness" and "softness". STM's how did you decide what to go with? Also approx how much did you spend? The prices vary so much but I wonder if spending the big bucks for a mattress is worth it?
TIA
Re: STM: Crib Mattress Question..
DS slept on it from Day 1 and transitioned him to a twin bed at 20 months. He slept great and the mattress held up great even after he used his crib as a trampoline all day.
I went for something organic and as light as I could find - ended up being a soy mattress. I didn't want to have to heave a heavy mattress around in the middle of the night for sheet changes. And I went with organic because I didn't want to take any chances with the off-gases produced from the standard mattress.
I didn't want one of the two sided ones (seemed like a recipe for confusion during a 2am sheet change trying to remember which side of the mattress is for infant vs toddler) and my 10lb baby surely doesn't need an innerspring mattress - it'll just make it heavier when I'm trying to change the sheets. We'll upgrade to a nicer one with coils once LO is bigger.
The second time I just bought the cheap one from walmart.
BFP #2 11/30/09 EDD 08/12/10- Sophia Grace born 8/1/10
BFP #3 11/16/10 EDD 08/04/11- Samuel Richard born 7/28/11
BFP #4 01/04/12 EDD 09/19/12- Simon Nathaniel born 9/6/12
BFP #5 03/27/13 EDD 11/25/13- Savannah Lee born 11/18/13
Everyone has different priorities and things that they focus on--that's why I said that it was important to me. But organic mattresses aren't "gimmicks"-- it is a fact that most crib mattresses include toxins. It is mandatory that they use flame retardants, and only certain brands use non-chemical flame retardants like wool. Flame retardants are also mandatory in furniture and loose fitting pajamas. I'm not saying that flame retardants automatically cause "ill effects," but we don't know anything about most of these chemicals, and that is not something I wanted my child sleeping on. I was just letting people know that if it is something that they wanted to invest in, don't just rely on the word "organic," since that can often mean just organic cotton on top of chemical flame retardants.
https://articles.washingtonpost.com/2011-11-02/business/35282651_1_crib-mattresses-risky-chemicals-andy-igrejas
Does this ever reassure any mama or convince of a particular position?!? Especially on Internet forum!?