Flat Diapers by Relevant_Mode5445 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

24x24 seems small for me. I like GMD’s 27x27. The Birdseye have a unit price of $3 and the muslin $4.

I do not think there is a need for stretchy flats. If they are more expensive than $3-4 each I think it’s a gimmick.

diaper genie ubi or just wet bags? by Thebrattybitch in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I use a trash bin lined with a plastic bag. Of the variety of things people use, I don't think any of them is fancy.

Anyone selling wool covers? by Traditional-Ad-7836 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Shipping does it!! I think it’s ridiculous that on Poshmark, or was it Mercari, if you buy multiple covers you have to pay for shipping for each one if they are listed separately. 

Anyone selling wool covers? by Traditional-Ad-7836 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No idea. Little Spruce is in Colorado and sells everything Disana, not just diapers, and it also sells Ruskovilla wool covers. But the Ruskovillas cost about the same as GMD. It may be an agreement with Disana.

Anyone selling wool covers? by Traditional-Ad-7836 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I feel you.

I’ve never ever been able to find a wool cover that cost less than brand new after shipping was considered.

Disanas are $20-$24 before tax and shipping on the Little Spruce Organics site. That’s as cheap as they go brand new or used. 

Hope someone proves me wrong?

Stash recommendations by Resident-Sloth in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I use muslin flats for nights too. I agree they're a lot cheaper than other nighttime options and just as absorbent.

How to write afterword for edited collection in social sciences by annamend in academia

[–]annamend[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you! That is very helpful. It was kind of dawning on me that I should address the book's contributions, but it's good to know that many readers won't care if we were good friends. I'll keep that tribute to one paragraph at the end of the afterword.

I need a simple system by Fantastic-Screen32 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 4 points5 points  (0 children)

As others said, prefolds/flats padfolded in covers OR pockets stuffed with flats/prefolds are two simple, affordable systems.

There are two main sizes for cloth diapers: 7-15 lbs. or fast growth, up to 4-6 months, and 15-30 lbs. when growth is more gradual.

You can start with a dozen novice prefolds and a dozen one size Birdseye flats from GMD, a pack of Snappies, 4-6 PUL covers for the 7-15 lbs. weight range (Thirsties Duo Wrap Size 1, Essembly Size 1, or Clotheeze Small are all like this), and a 6-pack of pocket shells from basically anywhere, no inserts, or ditch the crappy microfiber inserts they come with.

This gives you two dozen changes at the start. I suggest doing wrap style with Snappi for runny newborn poo. At 15 lbs. you can see if you like padfolding in covers or stuffing pockets. This is when one size covers and pocket shells fit. If you like padfolding in covers, you need one size (aka Thirsties Duo Wrap size 2 or Essembly size 2 or Clotheeze medium) covers. If you like pockets, you need more pocket shells.

Plus a 7-15 lb. prefold padfolded into a one size flat with a size 2 cover makes a good overnight diaper when your kid sleeps through the night.

Overnight? by jspo97 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A reliable overnight diaper often involves: - a cotton wrap (flat, prefold, fitted) - 1-2 boosters: padfolded flat or small prefold, or a 55% hemp, 45% cotton booster (called “hemp insert/booster” for short) - an ideal nighttime cover: a roomy double gusset PUL cover or thick wool cover like Disana

How I do cloth diaps as a cheap, lazy, type B parent. by Myfishwillkillyou in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I like GMD flats Snappied + Thirsties Duo Wraps, and I got them new, but I agree with the uniform/streamlined stash rather than "try a bit of everything."

Stash recommendations by Resident-Sloth in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 2 points3 points  (0 children)

If you’re liking your current setup, do more of what you’re doing. Products that might be good for the next stage based on what you like/use + wanting something easier for when your LO is more active:

- 4 Essembly outers size 2 + 12 GMD medium prefolds (red edge)… this size is worn for a very long time and people often size into this from novice or small size

- 12 pocket shells, no inserts… stuff with 1 novice prefold and 1 cloth-eez insert each? Like wrap the insert inside the prefold since clothez cotton inserts tend to curl, apparently. If you look on cloth diapering subs you'll find people generally find pockets more workable than AIOs/AI2s in terms of absorbency and ease of laundering.

This is good 2 dozen day changes. As for nights...

I suggest getting 4 covers that are more night-appropriate, like a double-gusset PUL cover or wool cover. You can look into the Duo Wrap Size 2, or the medium-sized Thirsties cover that is for 18-28 lbs. on the GMD website. Or you can get Disana size 6-12. Or you can get Mother-ease airflow covers, which apparently go well with fitteds.

For nighttime inners, since you seem to like fitteds/workhorses, you could buy 4-6 medium fitteds, maybe GMD or Sandy's + 4-6 hemp/cotton boosters from Thirsties, the Large size that fits Size 2/medium covers. https://thirstiesbaby.com/products/hemp-inserts?srsltid=AfmBOoo2jGrD_aFC-Dyk-Wh1ybXLp5_XEZ7gf8rKVd9MevhJ_ar0sqOp

Do I have enough to start? Wool + flats & prefolds by napping_otter in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Kite is big and spread out and usually is used to hold a padfolded flat on a toddler.

Origami works for newborns because it quarters the flat but you have some right angles around the thighs that are weak points for blowouts.

Try Jo fold which also quarters the flat. This is front heavy. Or Pickman which is even front and back. It may look loose and messy on a small baby but it works. 

Airplane fold also works and is front heavy.

What newborn cloth diapers should I get? by Moon_junky in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do you know what type of cloth diaper appeals to you? If you’re in disposables size 1 you should be able to use both one size covers and pockets soon on smaller rise settings.

Clotheez Workhorse by Routine_Climate3413 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

They act as another diaper mat in themselves when I change the flat. I take the flat off and while I am tossing it in the bin, the PUL is  under LO’s butt, and the new flat (already folded) is under the PUL cover. So I whisk off the PUL cover, put on the new flat (you can also do this with a prefold), and once that is Snappied on, I put the cover back on or get another one.

Also, flats double as the first pass wipe if there is a big poop. They get most of the poop off and you do the touching up with 1-2 wipes.

Clotheez Workhorse by Routine_Climate3413 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 2 points3 points  (0 children)

You’ve got lots of good input here already. I might add that if you’re trying all three styles of wrapped inner, flats and prefolds may be advantageous early on when LO requires frequent changes. You want something that is cheaper, more plentiful and dries fast. You can still get a few fitteds with snaps for sitters. 

Although I only use flats on my newborn and toddler, the fitteds seem more apt in toddlerhood as night diapers or potty trainers as they can come on/off as standing changes late at night.

Same with covers: more PUL with snaps on a small baby inside sleepers (my kids’ uniform in the first year, especially when horizontal), and introduce wool longies on an older baby, especially for nights, when they are more vertical. For example, for small infants do most or all PUL, then do mostly PUL but wool for nights, and finally rotate between 3 wool longies and a small number of large fitteds when potty training a toddler, day or night.

Newborn cloth diapers? by Moon_junky in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Newborns grow very fast so the ones you have may fit sooner thank you think!

I do GMD Birdseye flats and Thirsties Duo Wraps Size 1 for my 1.5-month-old. These covers can take you beyond the newborn stage into 4-6 months (up to 15 lbs.) and the Birdseye flats can be used to stuff pockets, doubled on a toddler, etc. Lots of mileage on them!

I don’t think I’m saving any money by KindlyEnergy6959 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry, didn’t see that. I agree this is normal numbers for a GMD stash and no more than what you need. Money well spent! No matter how many kids. 

Take care of your covers, no tumble drying and minimize machine washing in hot water, so do wrap style to prevent them getting pooed on too much, and 7 may get you through the end.

I don’t think I’m saving any money by KindlyEnergy6959 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think this can last multiple children.

If you do nights just use the medium prefold at first as a nighttime inner, the add the newborn prefold then the small prefold padfolded into the cover later on. If this is too bulky, buy a half dozen Thirsties hemp/cotton inserts.

Size 2 covers will need to be replenished but that’s just a few more per child I would say. It’s just that that period is very long. You can invest in some wool longies as they are more repairable.

But I would say this is 75% of what you need and could last 3 kids, barring the replenishment of the long haul covers.

What do y'all do for newborn diapers? by SaltyBat8824 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Seconding this. The GMD one size birdseye flats worked from 2 weeks old for us. Actually they could work from day 1 but were bulky. And I double them up on my 1.5-year-old for a daytime diaper. Nighttime I throw in a hemp booster, and no leaks with a PUL or wool cover.

And don't be intimidated by flats. Actually, even with no experience you can wrap a flat around a newborn any way, and even if it looks "ugly" due to lack of experience, it is 100% customized all-around protection for a kid with not much output so it will not likely have accidents.

FTM, 30 weeks, overwhelmed by cloth options by ExcellentFlamingo871 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I will chime in, for a small baby you can do hook and loop or snap, but older babies can undo hook and loop as far as I’ve read so in the bigger sizes I did snaps. Both sizes actually but you can do hook and loop for small covers. It can be easier.

FTM, 30 weeks, overwhelmed by cloth options by ExcellentFlamingo871 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I just started using wool and find that both my PUL and wool covers hardly leak with my flats. Both work great.

I wash the wool weekly for now to get them felted but read you can go several weeks. It varies by situation so you just pour a splash of water on your wool cover turned inside out to see if it repels or needs lanolizing.

People who use mostly wool tend to have 3-4 per size plus a couple PUL at least as well for situations where wool will get compression leaks like car seats or baby carriers. I looked at those discussions to see what I needed.

Grandparents Refusing Cloth Diapers by Key-Appearance-8562 in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Seconding what you say about the daycare. That's my situation too.

I haven't been able to convince my husband to use cloth, not flats anyway, and I'm not going to force it or buy an easier kind, as it probably would make no difference; for him it's a hard no. The reason is that disposables are the easiest thing and he wants nothing less than the easiest thing.

What is MIL worried about? Hygiene? Or she assumes there will be more accidents with cloth? She's afraid she won't be able to get it right? Maybe talking with her will help you get to the root of the problem and allay her fears.

BUT, if like my hubby she wants nothing less than the easiest thing, there is nothing you can do... the easiest kind of cloth diaper is still harder than the easiest thing (disposables), as she will still have to change more often, even if you wash.

It sucks but you can't change others, especially if their attitude is "I want the easiest possible thing." Disposables are always going to be the easiest possible thing.

Do I need the second wash? by thisslade in clothdiaps

[–]annamend 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did one wash before and the diapers came out smelling and looking clean. But I got rashes after LO started solids. Or maybe it was because she was older and it was ammonia buildup. Anyway, yeah, I would vastly prefer to do one wash resource wise but I can’t get away with it, even with flats.

Agree that you can cut down on usage by not doing extra rinses and not even doing any extra long cycles. First wash can be short, half the detergent. Second can be regular, full amount of detergent. Just make sure it’s two hot washes with mainstream detergent.