This was posted 3 years 6 months 2 days ago, and might be an out-dated deal.

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AIO (All-in-one) Cloth Nappies $19 (Was $30) + $9.50 Shipping ($0 with $100 Order) @ Only About Nappies

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Cloth nappies at $19 each. original price is $30.
OSFM (One size fits most) is a cost effective way to fit bub from birth (or a couple of weeks after depending on bubs size), all the way through to toilet training.

Postage is $9.50 for orders under $100. Free postage for orders over $100.
No coupon code required. Discount is automatically applied at checkout.
Offer ends 31st of May 2021. Offer renewed, now ends 17 June 2021.

We believe that cloth nappies are the best solution for your family with less waste, cost saving, and beautiful designs.

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Only About Nappies
Only About Nappies

closed Comments

  • -2

    Such a small price to pay for poo throughout your clothes and washing…

    • +4

      You rinse the poo off and then soak them in a bucket of water with napisan until you have a full bucket. I wash them separately from my other clothes too but would probably be fine all in together anyway.

      • -1

        That's fine if you're a competent poo rinser…

        • +2

          I can tell you that it is very obvious if there is poo on the nappy or not.

    • +2

      you rinse off poo and do a separate nappy load each day. It's not a big deal.

  • +2

    12 for $29 at Big W.

    Maybe even cheaper at Kmart.

    • There is a great deal of variance in quality.

      personally I'm not fussed on this brand either though. My Little Gumnut is the same price and probably the best quality out of the 7 or 8 brands we have.

  • +3

    AIO (All-in-one) Cloth Nappies $19 (Was $30)

    Your overpriced nappies haven't been $30 since you started advertising on here more than 6 months ago.

    • Busted in the custard

  • Whether you choose this product or the cheaper cloth nappies at K-Mart, reusable nappies are a much better environmental and financial 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 babybeehinds.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 traditional cloth nappies (much cheaper than these modern ones). We even used cloth nappies when bush camping around Oz.
    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.

    • -1

      2 billion disposable nappies each year is a made-up stat. Pure fiction.

      Having half as many kids would have a similarly conservative impact on the environment and finances, but I'd never presume to tell people how many children they should be having.

      • But you seem to have opinions on everything else here I see

      • -1

        "2 billion disposable nappies each year is a made-up stat. Pure fiction."
        Fact check: According to figures released in 2009 by IbisWorld, Australians use around 5.6 million nappies per day. Multiply that by 365 days comes to 2.044 billion.

        "I'd never presume to tell people how many children they should be having."
        I never said how many children others should be having. It's everyone's right/choice to have no children or as many as they want.

        • -1

          305,000 babies were born in Australia in 2019.

          Generously assuming that every single one of them, and an equal amount of 1-2 year olds born in 2018, wore disposable nappies every day until their second birthday would mean 610,000 nappy wearers.

          2 billion divided by 610,000 divided by 365 = 9 nappies per day for every child for the first two years of their life. Now I know my stats and preferences won't be universal and I don't suppose to speak for everyone, but my child was out of nappies well before two and seldom used anywhere close to nine of them per day. And that's before even reducing the count for your four kids and all of the others who wear cloth nappies.

          "I never said how many children others should be having."

          No-one claimed otherwise.

          "It's everyone's right/choice to have no children or as many as they want."

          Indeed. Just as it is their right to decide what to cover their bums with…

  • +1

    My 2 billion disposable nappies figure was based on data referenced from IBISWorld. In case you are not aware, IBISWorld is a company that analyses economic, demographic, market data and financial data on thousands of industries for their 10,000 clients. So they would have used data such as ABS data, Census data, sales data and import data of disposable nappy companies to come up with this estimate.
    Even if you don’t believe IBISWorld’s figures and halve it to one billion, or come up with another figure (I am not sure what figure you believe is more accurate), there is no denying that there is a massive amount of disposable nappies that ends up in landfill each year.
    The purpose of my original post was to highlight to others that might be unaware of the massive environmental impact and massive cost that comes with choosing disposable nappies. People reading my post who are genuinely concerned about the environmental impact of disposable nappies and/or want to save thousands of dollars per baby may then switch to cloth nappies.
    Of course if you don’t care about the environment, don’t want to save thousands of dollars or can’t cope with cleaning cloth nappies, then it’s your right to choose disposable nappies.

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