This was posted 3 years 10 months 15 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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Modern Cloth Nappies $28 Each Delivered @ Only About Nappies

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NAPPY28

A baby will go through approximately 2500 disposable nappies in their first year of life alone. These same nappies will sit in landfill for up to 500 years!

A Modern Cloth Nappy is re-usable, comfortable, and will save you so much money and ultimately will help to save our planet.
BabyTree is an established nappy brand in New Zealand, and has finally made it across the ditch to Australia.
These nappies have fantastic reviews - which should answer any questions or doubts you may have on this fantastic new trend.
The high quality of the product shows how good they are.
All of the mothers we have talked to who are using these are amazed at how well they work, and how easy it is to use.
They fit well, clean easily, and babies bum stays nice and dry!

Only About Nappies is having a one time special:
Each All In One (AIO) nappy is $28 each.
Free shipping within Australia for a limited time.
No minimum purchase required.
Please use the discount code at checkout.
If you’re looking to start your cloth journey or bulk out your stash. NOW is the time!
OFFER ENDS 14th Jan 2021

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Only About Nappies
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closed Comments

  • What's the normal price?

  • Are these the same MCN that have been $20 since December?

    • MCN?

      • MCN = modern cloth nappy.

    • +1

      That deal didn't include delivery. This deal does.

  • each…🤨

  • -2

    Reusable nappies. Hard pass.

  • +4

    We are now passed the nappy stage (thank god) however I don't know a single family from the baby group that stuck to using these. Many started, with the best of intentions, but none stuck at it past 3 months.

    Newborns break you, they are amazing but IMO you've got enough on your plate without cloth nappies in the mix.

    • Yeah I agree, we tried but gave in too. But we have no laundry, just a euro “laundry” in the kitchen, so nowhere to have a laundry basin, buckets and so on which smell in a separate part of the house. Plus we’re both working. If we did have a big house with laundry and outside space, might have been able to do a mix of the two. My philosophy is to take something outside and hose it off (yeah I’m a dad) so I reckon my approach would be a weekly hang them (nappies) all up on a rope and hit them with the Gerni.

      I hate the thought of the nappies we’ve generated with our two kids, but it just isn’t possible. We looked into nappy recycling/cleaning services but can’t remember why we didn’t go that way, probably prohibitive costs or something.

      But hats off to you all out there sticking it out washing stinky turd off nappies!

  • Yeah still using 3 year old Alva baby on kid #2 - still look new. You can get 20 x Alva baby with 5 layer liner upgrade for under $150 inc delivery ($1.33 express shipping to my address). Yeah Alva baby are made in China, so are these and over $20 a nappy cheaper.

  • I have used cloth nappies on twins and a singleton. Twins were 10 years ago and I paid this much then. Even so I still saved money. Plus toilet training is a lot quicker in cloth, as well as green benefits, especially if you start your youngest in them and reuse.

    My youngest is in cloth and I paid about $3-5 each. Price needs to be a lot sharper.

  • Guess with this you need at least 5 nappies a day. Then you have to wash it every day. Hmmm…hard decision

    • +1

      I think double that, to give the prior day’s set to dry, assuming sunny weather and not using a dryer.

    • +1

      We bought 32 Alva nappies for one child. At the start it's about 8-12 nappies a day and can take up to 2 days for the bamboo inserts to fully line dry in the winter. The 32 nappies costed us $200 and the laundry detergent costs $15 for 100 washes. The money and environmental saving has made the extra effort completely worth it in my opinion (It's a piece of cake once you get into the routine).

      This site has some great info on costs and comparisons: https://www.darlingsdownunder.com.au/the-cost-of-cloth.htm

      • +1

        Thanks for the link.
        Yes, if you are concerned about the environment reusable nappies are a far better choice.
        And if you are concerned about saving money (as a good Ozbargain person is), then reusable nappies are also a far better choice.

  • +1

    We use terry towel nappies with waterproof liner over the top. So far, so good, and easy to manage. Will see what happens when bub starts to eat as we hear the poos are gross then.

  • Tried cloth nappies. Because cakehole MCN manufacturers don't tell you which washing powders are ok, we had non absorbent nappies within 6 months and strip cleaning didn't work.

    Seller - provide this information or please leave the market. Lest others lose money on unsupported garbage like we did.

    Ours were hippybottomus. Obviously I don't recommend them.

  • What a great alternative to disposable nappies.
    I've read that 2 billion disposable nappies go into landfill in Australia every year, 4% of our landfill is comprised of disposable nappies and they can take up to 500 years to decompose (plastic components). What an environmental disaster that is.
    The website babybehinds.com.au estimates that disposable nappies will cost $3,250 per child, so choosing reusable nappies is one of the great Ozbargain choices you can make.
    All our 4 kids were in cloth nappies. We even used them when bush camping around Oz with our first two.
    Years ago 100% of families used cloth nappies. Now only 5% do.
    Reusable nappies are a big financial win for families and a big win for the environment.
    When my kids have children, I'm buying them a pack of reusable nappies like these.

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