Friday 16 January 2015

Baby Bare Magic

I posted over twelve months ago about OSFM nappies and how they fit on babies from birth till toilet training. You can pop over and see that blog here.

As an extension of that article, I am today gathering together a pile of pictures of Baby Bare on different sized babies. Along with these cute pictures, I am listing some pointers to get the best fit on your Baby Bare cloth nappies. These pointers apply to the Teddies and Bare Cub cloth nappies.

Best Fit

1. Always, always pull the nappy up through the groin towards the belly button to stretch the elastics out. Once you've done this, snap the nappy in place. You will find it hard to get a good fit if you just pull the tabs to the side and secure. Pulling the nappy right up will help it sit properly on your child.

2. If you are using a Bare Cub nappy and you find that you get a tummy gap (but the legs are perfect) you can skip a snap on the waist band to give a tighter fit. To do this, snap once for the legs. Then, Skip two snaps on the waist band, and put the third (the most centre snap) into the next hole. You will have one male snap on the waist tab unsnapped, and two female snaps on the front of the nappy empty.

3. Contact us for snap covers if you feel you want to open up your nappy past the third waist snap and need to cover the male snap.




4. Sometimes you may find you get the best fit by snapping the legs onto different settings. This is ok. If the fit works, do it. Each leg does not need to be the same. Your child might be right in between sizes and this can give you the perfect waist measurement and still a great seal around the legs.

5. Make sure the nappy sits in the undie line, not around their thighs. The nappy should sit in the join between the lef and the torso. Otherwise this may lead to leaks and a strange fit.


Now for the fluffy gorgeousness. A pile of Baby Bare fluff on cute little bottoms.

Enjoy,

Jenny



4 Months and 28 Months


2 weeks old, 4 kg


26 Months in a Teddy Bare Side snapper



Ten Months

6 Weeks old


9 Months
3 Years old (2 months of being 4) 16.5 kg in an AIO Bare Cub

23 Months

16 Months

3 Years old and 2 Years old



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