Let's talk diapers.
It's been a good number of years since I had babies in diapers in my home (1983-1996), however, being the stay-at-home mom that I was, I opted to use good old-fashioned cloth diapers with rubber pants, and yes (GASP), with diaper pins.
In my case it wasn't about economics, nor was it about saving the environment, even thought these two very arguments definitely played a role in me feeling good about my decision to use reusable diapers, but for me using old-fashioned traditional diapers equated to no-nonsense diapering. No emergency runs to the store for Pampers... no running out of diapers in the middle of the night... and no unnecessary chemicals and materials against my children's skin.
Being able to fold a standard traditional diaper into any shape or size at change-time, meant never having to worry about sizes, no matter what age or shape the child was, and those old pull-on, green house rubber pants, as diaper rash inducing as they could be at times, worked dandy at keeping baby's bottom waterproofed, and whatever baby did in their pants, stayed in their pants, thanks to those simple, trusty, tried-and-true, old-fashioned waterproof pants.
Economically speaking, aside from laundering, rubber pants were the only long-term expense (if you can call it that) needing replaced and/or sized-up as baby grew, and being pennies per pair, I never felt the pinch of buying a pack or two of rubber pants when needed.
Hands-up if it was good old-fashioned diapers (cloth) with rubber pants and pins in your home back in the day.
It's been a good number of years since I had babies in diapers in my home (1983-1996), however, being the stay-at-home mom that I was, I opted to use good old-fashioned cloth diapers with rubber pants, and yes (GASP), with diaper pins.
In my case it wasn't about economics, nor was it about saving the environment, even thought these two very arguments definitely played a role in me feeling good about my decision to use reusable diapers, but for me using old-fashioned traditional diapers equated to no-nonsense diapering. No emergency runs to the store for Pampers... no running out of diapers in the middle of the night... and no unnecessary chemicals and materials against my children's skin.
Being able to fold a standard traditional diaper into any shape or size at change-time, meant never having to worry about sizes, no matter what age or shape the child was, and those old pull-on, green house rubber pants, as diaper rash inducing as they could be at times, worked dandy at keeping baby's bottom waterproofed, and whatever baby did in their pants, stayed in their pants, thanks to those simple, trusty, tried-and-true, old-fashioned waterproof pants.
Economically speaking, aside from laundering, rubber pants were the only long-term expense (if you can call it that) needing replaced and/or sized-up as baby grew, and being pennies per pair, I never felt the pinch of buying a pack or two of rubber pants when needed.
Hands-up if it was good old-fashioned diapers (cloth) with rubber pants and pins in your home back in the day.