We had 6 children, all in cloth diapers..What did everyone use in their homes?
Yes.Wasn’t there already a diaper thread ?
I don't have any children myself Aunt Marg, but I was very active in helping my oldest sister with her two young boys back in the early '60s, she used only cloth diapers, not sure if disposables were available back then. I think if I had a baby and disposable were available, I'd likely have used those for convenience.- What did everyone use in their homes?
- Anyone here use a combination of the two (both cloth and disposable)?
- What was the deciding factor in your home regarding using one type of diaper over another? i.e. Economics, health, etc.
Oh my word, yes, me, too. For reasons you mentioned, I loved using the metal-capped pins, where the safety-cap snapped down over the head of the pin, securing the pin from springing open accidentally, or due to a toddlers curious fingers.@Aunt Marg, I didn't see your pin thread, but I do remember having to be extra careful all the time that the diaper pins were closed properly and safely. Thinking about it now, it probably wouldn't be a bad idea these days to have a couple of cloth diapers on hand for emergencies. No problem at all with your thread, folks can always pass by any thread if they're not interested.![]()
The only ones my sister ever used were the ones with the big plastic head, usually colored either pink or blue.For reasons you mentioned, I loved using the metal-capped pins, where the safety-cap snapped down over the head of the pin, securing the pin from springing open accidentally, or due to a toddlers curious fingers.
I know exactly the ones you're talking about! I had a supply of those as well (and used them), but thinking back to my old babysitting days, the big plastic head pins are the ones I most often encountered.The only ones my sister ever used were the ones with the big plastic head, usually colored either pink or blue.![]()
I can't either! LOL!I can't imagine using a cloth diaper at our age. It's Depends all the way!
For a busy mom, a family... I can definitely see where disposables would rise above the alternative.I started out with cloth diapers for my son. It was a lot of extra work and I wasn't getting enough sleep anyway, so I was exhausted all of the time. When he was 10 months old we took the camper RV out west for an extended vacation. I switched to disposables and never looked back. We had to bypass Oregon because they had banned the sale of disposable diapers for environmental purposes. I never did get to Oregon.
I put in three summers in my later teens, helping my mom at our church nursery, but all of the women were well-experienced with using cloth. That was back in the 70's, when cloth diaper use was still really popular.Both... mostly cloth, disposables on occasion while traveling.
As a young broke couple, the Wife had a choice, Cloth Diapers and a wash machine, or disposable.
Got to tell my favorite diaper story,30+ years ago and the ladies still talk about it
Our son was in the nursery at church, and afterwards I go to get him...
The ladies ask where the wife was...he needed changed... So I proceed to grab the diaper bag
The one lady stops me and says " you need to go get Dawn because its a messy diaper"
I laughed and proceeded to clean him up and put a new cloth diaper on him...
The 3 ladies stood there staring with their jaws hanging...
I dont think I could have surprised them any more growing a 3rd eye.....
I used liners in my home, too.well it has been about fifty odd years but.... we used the two nappy system, the terry towel outer nappy and the softer linen thin inner nappy, but my ex was a nurse and lined the inner one with toilet tissue [clever girl] so my son filled the toilet paper and the nappies were easily washed...lol... allegedly
well i only changed the nappy once and there was nowt solid [but dont tell him i said so]I used liners in my home, too.
I would have guessed that toilet paper would make for a mess and not be overly reliable.
One argument I don't buy into is the waste argument with cloth, and the notion that cloth diapers use up so much water to launder. At least with cloth diapers, they're emptied into the toilet, so the waste goes where it belongs, unlike disposables that get tossed full of waste.Disposables are easy and quick but our landfills have really suffered. Mother nature favors cloth and early potty training.
and the disposables take centuries to break down, it seemsOne argument I don't buy into is the waste argument with cloth, and the notion that cloth diapers use up so much water to launder. At least with cloth diapers, they're emptied into the toilet, so the waste goes where it belongs, unlike disposables that get tossed full of waste.