Sewing

Showing posts with label staydry insert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label staydry insert. Show all posts

Thursday, June 28, 2012

Mama's Prince Charming

Meet my main squeeze. He's at least 21 Pounds ( haven't weighed lately), size 18 months, and 5 months old, he can roll both ways, and has 1 tooth.

His loves are: mommy, cloth diapers, mommy, breastmilk, spalshing his sisters in the tub, and mommy! Not necessarily in that order.

Here is prince charming in his favorite diaper, a softbums omni with a mama made insert inside. His twin sisters (cinderella and snow white) love to call him prince charming on dress up days, so I will too.

His other favorite thing to do is dance with all the princesses at the ball on dress up day!

 

Monday, June 25, 2012

Easy inserts



When I originally began looking into cloth diapers for my ds, I liked the idea of cloth diapering and everything I was finding out, except the price. As an experienced seamstress I decided the way for me to cloth diaper would be to sew my own. I began researching the fabric and materials needed for sewing my own diapers, and I learned a lot. The only problem was I had never owned or used a cloth diaper, so I had no idea what features I actually needed. I started by sewing a few flannel fitteds using different free online patterns and tutorials and tried them out on my niece who I kept daily at the time. I liked what I had done so far and continued on in my cd journey and bought some PUL fabric. After a couple of versions, I ended up with a pretty successful pocket diaper. I made tons of inserts from old burp cloths (prefold version) and flannel scraps. I also picked up several thirsties covers NWT second-hand at a great price, and decided I had a good enough stash to start my ds off with.

Over the last 5 months I have learned a lot about cloth diapering. I learned my homemade inserts weren't absorbent enough, I needed to add more layers of absorption, I didn't love pocket diapers, fitted diapers with a cover aren't twice as much work, and most of all that cloth diapering is possible and I do want to make it work.

My chunky ds grew out of those size 1 thirsties duo wraps quickly and my homemade stash of pockets with various types of openings weren't exactly leak free, so I began to shop the sales. I researched a lot and bought what would work for a chubby legged big boy and soon to be much bigger boy. Much to my surprise, i loved all the products I ordered.

So, my advice to all you money-saving sewing mamas out there is to first find what you like and works in your situation, then recreate it!

I did just that and now I have a good stash of purchased and homemade cloth diapers and inserts that work well every time. This is an easy insert to make that I modeled after my softbums staydry microfiber inserts.

I knew by reading online that the softbums inserts were 4 layers of microfiber topped with stay dry micro fleece. I had green microfiber kitchen hand towels and brown micro suede in my cd making stash already, so that's what I used. Here are the steps to recreate an insert like this one:

  1. Trace around existing insert to make a pattern
  2. Pin and cut your layers
  3. Pin layers together: stay dry on top then 4 layers of microfiber
  4. Serge edges
  5. Add a male snap (I used mismatched leftovers) to a tag or small piece of fabric
  6. Sew this with the snap facing outwards onto the microfiber side of the insert
  7. Snap in cover and use!
Just on a side note, I love the brown on the top of the inserts! They show no stains, while the white one does.

Here's a price comparison:

Butter suede bought as a remnant. Approximately $0.25 per insert

Microfiber bought as a dish towel . $1.30

Tag $0.25

Snap and thread. I used mismatched bits of snaps leftover from other projects. I'll just guesstimate around $0.20 for both.

That's $2.00 for a homemade insert versus $5.00 for a brand name one. They function exactly the same.