August 2020 Moms

Product Spotlight Series: Diapering

This is a place for FTMs to ask questions about, S+TMs to share their prior experience with, and everyone to share what they're eyeing in the world of maternity, baby and postpartum products. Each week we'll spotlight a new category of product to help streamline and make it easier to refer back. This week we're discussing DIAPERING. Think: disposables (how many and in what size, brands that worked for you), wipes, diaper creams, diaper pails - all fair game! For all things cloth diapering related, see The Great Cloth Diaper Discussion.

I've omitted the FTM/STM prompts below as I think our group prefers a more free-form response and conversation. Let me know if they're missed and we can bring them back for our next edition!

To view past Product Spotlights or the upcoming schedule, see here: https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1DzmfbSu7toufv3p1VWNu1XOXDaU-tbI5FEfV8av46pc/edit?usp=sharing

Re: Product Spotlight Series: Diapering

  • We mostly used cloth, but I use disposables for the first week or two of newborn, vacations, baby sitters, extra long car rides, etc. I've basically switched to disposables now because I just never got around to switching back after a temporary living situation without reliable laundry. 

    I use whatever's cheapest - typically Comforfs (fred Meyer store brand) or Up and Up (Target store brand) and sometimes Parents Choice (Walmart store brand). Early on with my first, I tried all the brands - Huggies, Pampers, Luvs, 7th gen, honest. Paying more money, in my experience, does not equal a better diaper with fewer blow outs or leaks. We had the same amount of blowouts with any of the disposables - almost every poop. Same with my second, and they are very differently shaped babies. I've had one chunker and one skinny baby. So I just bought the cheapest since they were going to blow out anyway. 

    A lot of people swear by pampers, but I specifically dislike that brand. I feel (and my sister also has seen this) that they don't fit as well around the waist and want to slip down. Pampers have a waistband with slight stretch but don't have any elastic back there, whereas Huggies and most of the storebrands do. 

    I also had issues with Huggies. I found that if they were in the diaper wet for awhile with multiple pees, like overnight or a long car trip, the absorbent material came out and would be in chunks/beads all over their crotch, and I had to pick it off. I haven't had that issue with store brands. 

    Wipes - I also use storebrand.

    Creams - I like Weleda the best. The only other one I've used is Beaudreux's butt paste. I grabbed that because she had a bad rash, and I ran out of Weleda, and Weleda is a natural brand, so I was looking for something more powerful. But they honeslty worked about the same. And they both smell really good!

    Never used a diaper pail. We just threw them in the regular trash. We haul the trash a couple times a week and have never had a stink issue. 

    Finally, don't assume Amazon is cheapest, especially if you're going non-name brand. At the prices I pay in my location, Comforts and Up and Up are about 10 cents cheaper per diaper than Amazon's store brand.  
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  • I'm another cloth diaper-er (still kind of amazed we have such a concentration in this BMB) but here are my two cents on and experiences with a few diapering "accessories":

    We got the Hatch changing pad, because I knew if we were going to try breastfeeding I was going to be extremely anxious about whether baby was actually getting enough/anything. For that feature alone, the changing pad was amazing in the early days (you can confirm exactly how many ounces baby gets in each feed, just by weighing before and after), but I've also loved just being able to wipe it down and not having a cover to launder. We looked at the keekaroo peanut changer for the same reason.

    Water wipes are great. I originally had them on subscribe and save and now have waaaayyy too many because we really only use wipes for poo. Personal preference / opinions differ, but consider that before stocking up aggressively. We didn't get a wipes warmer but might for baby #2. I know people make fun of them and it is perhaps a bit excessive, but I think about how much I hate sitting on a cold toilet seat in the middle of the night and it seems like the whole diaper change ordeal might be a little less jarring for a sleeping/sleepy baby that way. We'll see.

    We also used Boudreaux's butt paste and it's been perfectly adequate. I have a friend who got the Baby Bum brush and uses it exclusively to apply, but eh, there's so much grosser stuff in your life as a mom I never found the application of diaper cream to really bug me.
  • We use just a changing pad on our couch. We've never had the whole getup. Oh, and for diaper cream we've always used A&D. I swear that stuff is a miracle worker. I've put it on ds2's diaper rashes and they will be gone the next day. 

    @coldlife Yup. The leaking is why we've up sizes before they're even "ready" weight wise. Ds2 will be ready for a size 5 soon and he's only 20 pounds even, but he's almost too tall for his size 4s. 
  • FTM mom here... these are some of my favorite threads... thanks for sharing all of your wisdom :)

    @emiliadkay I keep going back and forth on the Keekaroo (know it's not the one you have). It's pricey, but honestly not that much more than the changing pad and two covers I've currently got on my secret registry. I read somewhere that sometimes discoloration happens with the Keekaroo. Any other STM+ moms want to weigh in on whether or not you think it might be worth it? 

    How many diapers should I try to have on hand at the beginning, and in what sizes? And when you test out different kinds, did you go through a whole pack of one type or alternate? My plan at the moment was to buy diapers from Target so that I could easily return if one isn't working for us, or if we have too many smaller sized ones and need to go up, but then I'll likely switch over to Amazon. 

    Would also love to know more about some of the more eco-friendly/non-toxic diapers others have tried and liked. 

    And how necessary is a travel changing pad? Or could I just use a swaddle blanket. Thinking more about trying to cut down on number of must-have items I carry around in the diaper bag. 

  • @rivercitynik, at least a few newborns is a good idea. And then some size 1s. Your hospital or birth center may give you some newborns. If you get any registry bags, those typically have a few, too. 

    I bought the smallest pack, went through it, and when it didn't work at preventing blow outs (that was the big thing for me - everything else about the diapers was pretty much equal for me. Even the absorbent particle issue with Huggies I mentioned above I would have just dealt with if Huggies had contained the poop), then I bought a different brand and repeat. 

    I've never had a travel changing pad. I think it'd be handy, but just haven't gotten one. I typically have a receiving blanket or something handy and will use that. Even my nursing cover in a pinch! If there's no blow out, I'm pretty good at changing a diaper without getting mess everywhere. 
  • Observations from my first child and what I'll be doing differently: I will be getting a butt paste spatula.. only because I like to keep my nails on the slightly longer side and to me it will be worth it to not sit under the sink forever to scrub under my nails. 

    I will not commit to any specific type of diaper brand until I've put it on my baby and given it a chance, we switched brands as often as we switched sizes with my daughter, some brands fit better at different sizes than others depending on her body shape and there was nothing worse than finishing a box of X brand where she blew out or leaked when I had figured out that Y brand fit better. 

    Unless this kid has sensitive skin, it will just be the cheapest wipes I can buy because honestly they all get the job done anyway.

    We had a small place with our daughter, too small to waste space on a changing table set up.. I picked up a big basket from a thrift store and kept a travel changing mat, diapers, wipes, and A&D in there and I could drag that basket room to room with us if need be.  It would live in the living room during the day and move to her room at night and her booty got changed where ever I happened to be at the time. You can't convince me that this isn't the best way to deal with diapers.. and if we land up in a 2 story place with the next little one I'll just make 2 baskets, one for upstairs and one for down so I don't have to haul stuff up and down.  We take trash out daily so there's no reason to not just throw a used diaper in the can since it will go out that night anyway. 
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • @emiliadkay i didn’t find applying diaper cream gross, I just felt like I could never get my hands fully clean after. There was always a bit of sliminess that remained. That's why I loved the bum brush. 

    @rivercitynik most diaper bags come with a changing pad, so unless you are just going to use a regular bag you will have one to try and see if you like it or not. I didn't use it that often, but when I needed it I was glad I had it. I remember being at a nice restaurant when she was maybe 7 months old and having to change her on the nasty bathroom floor because they didn't have a changing table. If I didn't have the changing pad, idk what I would have done. Maybe closer to our due dates we will do a diaper bag packing thread. 

    For samples, I got a lot in various welcome kits and you will get sample diapers and wipes in the mail because all of the diaper companies have bought your data and know when you are expecting. You will also get formula samples and coupons in the mail. Even if you plan on cloth diapering and/or breastfeeding, keep them cause you might need them. I don't think you need to buy many diapers to start, if any, because you will definitely get a lot of newborn and size 1 as gifts and then you can decide what you like and reorder. 

    IDK if you all also know about composting diaper services. It's quite popular for people who don't want to use cloth but also don't want to leave diapers in our landfills forever. Once a week they drop off a new batch of diapers and pick up the dirties to compost (much like a cloth service does, but washing instead of composting). Just wanted to throw that out as an option because I didn't even know about it until after my baby was a few months old.

    Mail order diaper services are getting really big now, too. I even saw that Hilary Duff just started one. I find it amusing that so many celebrities have gotten involved in the poop containment business. It's so not glamourous. 

  • @roo_baby, really? Re: diaper samples in the mail. How do you get that, because I never did! Seriously, I've never gotten anything like that, and I'd love to! When I started having to supplement, I signed up for Similac's program (which is the brand we use) because I'd heard they send samples and coupons. I've never got a single thing from them either! One initial welcome email with a Shutterfly coupon I'll never use and a handful of email notifications of sales (which were useless to me because I kept hoping my supply would come up, so I never ordered bulk quantities or ordered online, period. Just bought as needed from the store.) So disappointed and annoyed I gave them my info for nothing. 
  • @roo_baby @RedBaramid Very fair points about the baby bum brush. I should add that we've been lucky and very rarely had to apply diaper cream, which I'm sure makes a difference in perceived utility. (This is also me trying to reassure myself that I haven't been walking around unknowingly smelling like poop-laced butt paste for the last 1.5 years...)

    @rivercitynik Our changing pad is a medium gray, but FWIW we've never had any discoloration issues. Maybe it's like a cutting board and only happens if you leave something on it for a long time before cleaning up? I dunno. Re: A travel changing pad, I did use ours semi-frequently in the first six months or so, and not at all since. Like @roo_baby mentioned, restaurants with no changing tables are the worst offenders. If you live somewhere where you drive most places, though, the back or backseat of the car with (or without) a swaddle blanket will generally have you covered.
  • I used a spare makeup brush that was never used as a diaper cream applicator in a pinch. Not as easy to clean as a spatula, but did the trick. 

    @roo_baby I am fascinated by the diaper composting thing! I cloth diaper but would love to do that for the times we use disposable when we are running errands or when he is with a babysitter. I am definitely looking into it! 
  • Diaper cream brush: I never used one either. I would just apply it with one finger and then wipe it off with a baby wipe. It pretty much just came off with one or two swipes. I never had an issue with having a hard time getting it off. I also keep my fingernails short, so it never really got under my nails either. 
  • Diapers: For my daughter we had enough Pamper diapers to last us through her first year of birth. They were great. Once we ran out of those we went with the Kirkland brand at Costco. I believe we are going to go with Kirkland from the beginning. I was never a fan of Huggies or Luvs. 

    Wipes: We also loved Pampers wipes. But once again, we switched over to the Kirkland brand once we ran out and they were great for us. We still currently use them. 

    Butt Paste: I love the Boudreaux's Butt Paste Diaper Rash Ointment, they worked like a charm for my daughter. To apply it, I just used a wipe. No need to waste money on a spatula to apply it. That's just another thing I need to worry about cleaning and I was not into doing anything extra that I did not need to. 

    Diaper Pail: We currently still have our Munchkin Step Diaper Pail by Arm and Hammer. I don't have experience with any other pail, so this was fine. It was rare when we a meal coming from it. We preferred the actual individual bags compared to the tear away bags. I feel like the tear away bags waste available space that could be used for more diapers. We also had a subscription with Amazon that delivered the bags every few months.  

    Changing Table: We did have to change table set up with all of the diapers and wipes or other accessories we needed for the baby in her room. If I could do it all over again I would have a changing table that comes on top of the dresser. I think that if frees up more space in the room, plus you can place the diapers and wipes on the top of the dresser or put them in a drawer. 
    Married: August 2012
    TTC #1: July 2015
    BFP 1: October 30, 2015; EDD: July 6, 2016- Team Pink
    TTC #2: September 2019

  • Diapers: We used babyganics diapers with my oldest. Then they changed something about them and he became allergic. We switched to Pampers from there on out and they were ok. We tried Pampers for DS2 and they were awful. We had so many blow outs. I then switched to cloth diapers and they're amazing. Total game changer. We're cloth diapering this time too. 

    Wipes: we made our own and then switched to Huggies sensitive. They're fine. Nothing to write home about but they get the job done.

    Diaper rash remedies: I swear by corn starch. You can get a tub at the store for about $2. It dries them up so quickly and is all natural. I also like A&D. Nothing beats air time though. 

    Changing table:  We have a travel changing pad that trifolds then folds in half so it is very compact. We just lay it on the bed or floor and change there. We have the white pad with the sides and had it on a dresser for a "changing table" but I never used it. It's so much easier to just pull out that pad and change where you are. 

    Diaper pail: we never had one. Breastfed poop doesn't smell bad and if it was a bad one we just put it in a plastic bag and tie it up. For cloth diapering we had a laundry basket with a wet bag in it.
  • Diapers: we used disposable. And went back and forth between Huggies and Pampers for both kids. I found I needed to toggle based on size of baby and they go through a lot of changes in that first year so sometimes one brand just seemed to fit better than the other. I agree with getting a small back if newborn size just in case and then bigger on 1s. Or you can get a few small packs of 1s from various brands to see what works for baby. One thing I know of is that Pampers has a pretty strong scent and if your little has a sensitivity to that they may break out in a rash. Never happened to ours but a few of our friends with kids had it happen.

    Wipes: Kirkland. They come in a massive box and it takes forever to go through them all.

    Diaper rash: We used Penaten on the more severe ones. 

    Changing table: for my  first we had the change table attached to the crib, for my second her room was a bit smaller so we couldn't use the change table and instead used a pad with the straps on top of a low dresser

    Diaper pail. Never used one. Just had a regular garbage can for wet only which we emptied regularly and then always ran the poop ones immediately out to the garbage bin outside. 
  • Hi this is my first baby and I am wondering if anyone has any reccomendations for disposable diapers and wipes that are good for sensitive skin? I myself have rather severe eczema and in case my poor baby inherits the sensitive skin gene, I'd ike to be as prepared as possible 
  • RedBaramidRedBaramid member
    edited February 2020
     I also swear by myconzol cream in case it turns out to be a yeast infection masquerading as a diaper rash. 
    Oh my gosh this is such a solid tip to throw out there especially to new moms! I always kept some myconzol on hand for my daughter, and if we hit a really bad rash I'd just throw some on with the A&D and honestly almost nothing lasted more than overnight with that combination. I've even found as we navigated potty training it's was good to have on hand as she learned to wipe and clean her self properly. This is totally something I keep stocked on and I didn't even think to mention it. 
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • I don't think it's been mentioned yet but....I really liked Aldi brand diapers/pull-ups/wipes for DS. They are really affordable and we never had any issues with leaks or rashes. They also just came out with their version of 'water wipes' (currently located in the Aisle of Shame (AOS for any aldi nerds out there!) So I snagged some to see if we like them. 

    We pretty much tried all the diapers under the sun but were on the Aldi train until DS was potty trained! 
  •  I also swear by myconzol cream in case it turns out to be a yeast infection masquerading as a diaper rash. 
    Oh my gosh this is such a solid tip to throw out there especially to new moms! I always kept some myconzol on hand for my daughter, and if we hit a really bad rash I'd just throw some on with the A&D and honestly almost nothing lasted more than overnight with that combination. I've even found as we navigated potty training it's was good to have on hand as she learned to wipe and clean her self properly. This is totally something I keep stocked on and I didn't even think to mention it. 
    Oh yes, this. I actually asked a doctor about it, and she said it was fine, but only a tiny amount. I used the little tube of external cream that comes with the yeast infection suppository kits. 
  • Has anyone tried the sams club brand diapers? I was always hesitant to commit with my daughter based on no knowledge of them but was debating with this new baby. 
    TTC1: May 2015
    Primary IF May 2016; Failed HSG; Scheduled Lap Sept. 2016
    BFP: August 22, 2016/EDD: April 29, 2017
    DD: May 1, 2017
    TTC2: June 2019
    CP September 2019
    Lap and repeat HSG scheduled December 2019
    BFP: November 24, 2019/EDD: August 2, 2020
  • @sarah0985 We rocked Sam's club diapers for a while! I believe sometime between 3 and 6 months they were our JAM! Then kiddo grew a bit and they didn't fit her as well but we loved them! Sam's Club's brand sensitive stomach formula was also the ONLY formula that DD could keep down when I had to wean faster than expected. My mom lived an hour and a half away from us where the nearest Sam's was and she had a membership and she would come down every other weekend with diapers and formula for us (and of course then we'd pay her for it). 
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  • @hypermusic great tip on the nasty change stations. I forgot about those. 
  • krthousekrthouse member
    edited February 2020
    Whoops! Accidentally posted in the wrong month club! Happy babying, August Mamas!
  • Thank you ladies for all the tips! I never would have even thought of these things!
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