Long before I had children, I thought I wanted to use cloth diapers. Although my Yankee background is far from crunchy, any way that I could avoid using disposable products and save money seemed pretty appealing to me. When I was pregnant with Sir Toddler, I started doing my research and got some sticker shock with the fancy All-in-2 pocket diapers. I also didn't know anything about those fancy online baby registries, so I just registered for some prefolds at Babies R Us and went from there. All things considering, it's worked out for us.
Our diaper pail is nothing special. It's just a step can I picked up at Marshalls with a removable plastic liner, complete with a half-ripped-off label and broken child lock. I later drilled some holes in it to aid ventilation. When the liner gets stinky, we give it a wash with dish soap and spray it with hydrogen peroxide.
Baby diaper: Econobum cover, OsoCozy Size 1 prefold, Snappi (not pictured)
Toddler diaper: Flip cover, Econobum prefold
We inherited a dresser with the changing table space on top from the kids' older cousins. I know that some parents prefer to just change anywhere, but with cloth diapers I find it's helpful to have a centralized location to dump the dirties.
Our basket of diapering miscellany. I keep the peri bottle full of water for wetting washcloths ("wipes"), and we also keep disposable wipes since my husband prefers to use those for toddler poop.
Drawer full of covers, swim diapers, washcloths, and hemp inserts for nighttime.
Another drawer full of prefolds. It was the diaper drawer when we just had 1 in cloth.
Since Lady Infant often needs diaper changes when Sir Toddler is asleep in the nursery, we have a secondary basket of supplies in our bedroom. We just drag the plastic liner of the diaper pail over whenever we put him down for his nap or bedtime.
Lady Infant models the "jelly roll" fold with the Snappi.
And the cover.
Sir Toddler's cover with the newspaper fold tucked in.
Our wash routine is a cold rinse, followed by a hot heavy-duty wash cycle with powdered Tide. We tried a few other gentler soaps (Country Save and Rockin' Green) but had some major problems with stink because of our hard water. Our washing machine is an HE top loader, and as I've mentioned in previous posts, I don't really love it. It's not great for cloth diapers, or even messy toddler clothes. (Stay AWAY from the Maytag Bravos. The nice repairman who wouldn't take payment for his visit-- because the repairs would be so expensive--said it's better to go as simple as possible with top loaders. It is also the slowest washing machine I've ever used. Thank you for joining me on Consider the Following.)
When we leave the house, we just use disposables. Before Lady Infant made her appearance, I would take Sir Toddler out for shorter jaunts in cloth and store dirties in a wet bag. With two of them, it's hard to fit the requisite number of prefolds in the diaper bag. I also will switch to disposables when either of the kids gets a bad diaper rash--they both have really sensitive skin, and despite frequent changes Sir Toddler has had some nasty fungal and bacterial rashes in the past. Either way, we have saved a ton of cash using the prefolds at home. Although we've had to replace a few covers (a few accidentally made it into the dryer and it destroyed the PUL) the prefolds have held up really well so far. Sometimes I dream of upgrading to the less bulky AI2 diapers like the BumGenius. However, the simple diapers take a good beating in the washer and the dryer, and will hopefully live on to cover future baby ATPlets' bottoms.
That being said, we're still working out the kinks in our system. I'd like to reach a point where we can move to washing every other day (as we were with one child in cloth) since I have an excess of size 1 diapers, and the nightly wash routine ties up the machine. I'm trying to get the diapers out to air dry more often, but sometimes I don't make it down to the basement to retrieve our diapers until after lunch. And, despite, using the exact same system (prefold + hemp + PUL cover) that we used with Sir Toddler at four months, we are having chronic night leaks with Lady Infant. She is waking us up in the wee hours with her pajamas completely soaked at the tummy. If you have any suggestions for us, post a comment on this webzone.
If you're considering trying cloth diapers, feel free to ask me any questions! I'm not an expert, but I have certainly learned a lot through trial and error over the past two years. Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go check on the laundry. *eyeroll*