Best purchases: quality breast pump (Avent Isis is excellent, as is Medela brand), with a couple of compatible bottles for breastmilk storage...Avent bottles are great, plus you can freeze milk and homemade baby food right in the bottles. Bravado nursing bras for the first few months, infant car seat, good stroller, best quality high chair you can afford (it will be used for a long time...I really like my Peg Perego Prima Pappa)...look for few nooks and crannies...makes it easier to clean. If you're considering cloth diapers, get the best you can afford. I loved using Mother-Ease terry cloth diapers. A sling...good for newborn through toddlerhood! Baby Bjorn or Baby Trekker carrier are the best carriers...most comfortable and easy to use.
The biggest waste of money for us was a crib. Out of three kids, we got maybe 15 months total use out of it. We slept with our babies, and then introduced them to their own beds at about 13 months. If you do get a crib (as most people do!) get some layering pads. They are placed under the crib sheets...you can put down a pad and then a sheet, and then layer another pad and then a sheet...that way, when the first sheet gets wet or dirty, you can strip off the top layer and there is already a clean sheet in place.
Also didn't bother with a swing or playpen. IMHO, it's better to thoroughly childproof your home than put a baby into a playpen. Did like the exersaucer though...it worked well for my shower time...it fit right into the bathroom.
Also like our "Gyminy" by Tiny Love.
Do get lots of receiving blankets and flat cloth diapers, for many uses (swaddling baby, cleaning up messes, etc). Lots of onesies and sleepers for the first 3 months...you won't believe how many clothes a baby can go through in a day! But get a variety of sizes...too big is okay since baby may be big to begin with, and they grow so fast! My third baby was 9lbs 12oz, and she was out of newborn size within a week. :lol:
Don't bother with a Diaper Genie...it's one more way to get you to spend more $ unnecessarily with replacing the special plastic inserts. It also ends up preserving your diapers in a "plastic sausage" for all eternity. Easier and cheaper to toss dirty/wet dipes in a plastic grocery bag to toss out...just empty the garbage frequently to elminate odours. BTW, Breastfed baby poop doesn't smell bad. Breastfeed exclusively for 6 months, and you can avoid foul-smelling dipes for a good stretch of time. Once you start solids or formula, it starts to get stinky. :lol:
Books, books and more books. Read to your baby constantly. Read to them in utero (my eldest recognized Dr. Seuss's ABC book when he was born...and now, at 7 yo, he's a voracious reader.) Same goes for music.
Plus consider a good gliding/rocking chair...invaluable for breastfeeding (oh, don't forget a good nursing pillow too), story time, fussy nights.
mishi8
Edit: A couple more things: A changing table is not necessary. Can be handy if you have the space, but changing baby on the floor is just as easy, and baby can't roll off.
Get a good diaper bag. I found, of all the bags I ended up owning, a backpack worked best. Also liked having little waterproof bags handy for storing wet items (I cloth diapered and especially needed them for toting wet dipes home, but they're good for storing clothes that get wet or dirty.)
The biggest waste of money for us was a crib. Out of three kids, we got maybe 15 months total use out of it. We slept with our babies, and then introduced them to their own beds at about 13 months. If you do get a crib (as most people do!) get some layering pads. They are placed under the crib sheets...you can put down a pad and then a sheet, and then layer another pad and then a sheet...that way, when the first sheet gets wet or dirty, you can strip off the top layer and there is already a clean sheet in place.
Also didn't bother with a swing or playpen. IMHO, it's better to thoroughly childproof your home than put a baby into a playpen. Did like the exersaucer though...it worked well for my shower time...it fit right into the bathroom.
Do get lots of receiving blankets and flat cloth diapers, for many uses (swaddling baby, cleaning up messes, etc). Lots of onesies and sleepers for the first 3 months...you won't believe how many clothes a baby can go through in a day! But get a variety of sizes...too big is okay since baby may be big to begin with, and they grow so fast! My third baby was 9lbs 12oz, and she was out of newborn size within a week. :lol:
Don't bother with a Diaper Genie...it's one more way to get you to spend more $ unnecessarily with replacing the special plastic inserts. It also ends up preserving your diapers in a "plastic sausage" for all eternity. Easier and cheaper to toss dirty/wet dipes in a plastic grocery bag to toss out...just empty the garbage frequently to elminate odours. BTW, Breastfed baby poop doesn't smell bad. Breastfeed exclusively for 6 months, and you can avoid foul-smelling dipes for a good stretch of time. Once you start solids or formula, it starts to get stinky. :lol:
Books, books and more books. Read to your baby constantly. Read to them in utero (my eldest recognized Dr. Seuss's ABC book when he was born...and now, at 7 yo, he's a voracious reader.) Same goes for music.
mishi8
Edit: A couple more things: A changing table is not necessary. Can be handy if you have the space, but changing baby on the floor is just as easy, and baby can't roll off.
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