Saturday, June 5, 2010

Homemade Cloth Wipes!

A friend gave me a recipe for homemade wipes using select a size paper towels. We used it at first and it worked well. The only unpleasant thing about it was cutting the roll of paper towels in half. (My sweet hubby did that for me! Otherwise it would not have happened.) However, as I got the hang of using cloth diapers and decided that I would definitely be using cloth all the time, I could see how it would be simpler and even less wasteful to just use cloth wipes as well.

I soon found out that you could make cloth wipes from flannel receiving blankets. We had been given quite a few of those, so I decided to try it. I read that you just had to cut squares, put them back to back, and zigzag stitch around the sides, that they would fray at the edges, but that they were for bum wiping for goodness sake!

Well, I guess that's where the choosy comes in. I didn't what them fraying at the edges. So, I sewed them front to front like little pillows, turned them right side out, and then did the zigzag around the edges. I didn't aim for perfection. They're all different sizes. I eye-balled the square cutting. The zigzag lines around the edges took a few detours, but they look great...from a distance anyway! They are, after all, only for bum wiping!


How to make cloth wipes:

1. Sew 2 squares together with the soft fuzzy sides facing each other, stopping before going all the way around so you have room to turn it back inside out. (Sorry I don't know "sew-ese." I guess these are "layman's terms."

2. Turn it inside out and use a pen or something pointy to get the corners completely turned. You can see the little opening I mentioned in step 1.

3.Fold the little opening in as evenly as possible. (When I started doing the zigzag stitch all the way around I started here to secure it in place.)


4. Put sewing machine on zigzag mode and try to follow the edges all the way around. (Of course I tried to be neater with this one since I was taking pictures! :)


5. Done!



It took a long time to finish them between feedings and all the many things a new mommy has to do, but eventually I had a nice size stash of wipes and some good practice sewing that straight line without having to worry about ruining something nice. The best part? They were free!

I keep a hand full at a time of them in a Sterilite container that seals shut. The solution I use is simple and cheap, of course. Here it is:

1.5 cups of boiling water
1Tbs Baby Oil
1Tbs Baby Soap (Such as Johnson & Johnson's Head to Toe)

Pour over wipes and that's it. Let them cool down before using of course!

5 comments:

  1. LOVE it. If I'd survived cloth after my first two with no washing machine or dryer... I'd have definitely tried this... but then again my diapering days are ALMOST over!!

    amy in peru

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  2. How adorable! I love the layman's terms. I told my husband I'm pining for an old, second-hand sewing machine for my birthday this summer. I figure if the seller can show me how to thread the machine, I can figure the rest out. So please share any new projects you do! :)

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  3. Very cool! I'm going to try it when I get finished with sewing the cloth diapers. I'm going to have a bunch of flannel left over. If you're washing the diaper, you might as well wash wipes. How many of them do you go through each day?

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  4. Anna-I'm not sure how many a day...I just know I use less than when I was using disposables...I'm thinking 1 per change when you average out the lightly wet dipes when I might not wipe at all and the poopy ones (1 or 2 a day when I use up to 3) That is recently btw...she pooped almost every diaper the first 3 months!

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  5. Great idea with the receiving blankets! Just a tip for sewing....when doing a 'turn and topstich' style start in the middle of one of the square edges vs. the corner...it makes closing it much easier. You just pull on the two corners and it closes itself and you can pin or not pin! :)

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