You are viewing the laundry tag

Baby Food Stains Remover (Works on Poop Stains Too)

stain-removal-baby-clothing-graphic Babies are messy. The spills and accidents put stains in baby clothes that can be very hard to remove. Even parents of newborns have to content with baby formula stains, spit up stains, and most of all, poop stains. Getting stains out of baby clothes isn’t as easy as it sounds. For starters, babies have sensitive skin, so harsh laundry soaps and stain removers are out unless you want to be calling the pediatrician about a baby rash that looks really bad.

Bleach is a no-no for baby clothes too, not that it really matters since virtually all jumpers, onesies, shirts, pants, and tops made for babies have bright colors or cute patterns on them anyway.

Baby Laundry

Shortly after giving birth to a beautiful baby the mommy and daddy realize two things, that sleep is really, really, important, and that the increase in laundry volume is very disproportionate to the increase in family members. The washing machine gets a workout and the dryer does too. For the most part, though, more laundry is easily handled, especially once you realize that there is no point in folding baby clothes.

Yet, when it comes to ugly yellow stains, or brown stains, or even blue stains (don’t ask) it can challenge anyone’s parenting skills. For some reason, our usual stain stick, the Shout stain remover with the plastic brush thing on the top, seemed particularly ineffective on baby food stains. It is also not fun to try and rub a stain fighter all over the back of a onesie after a diaper blowout leaves a disgusting yellowish stain all over that awesome baby outfit Grandma bought.

Many skilled parents use a baby laundry detergent like Dreft or other pediatrician recommended laundry soap with no dyes, no perfumes, and no harsh chemicals in order to keep baby from developing a rash from his clothing or sheets. It is natural to assume that a laundry soap like that might be "weaker" than regular soaps with all of their powerful non-sensitive skin friend chemicals; so, you might be tempted to try washing baby’s clothes in "regular" laundry soap. However it turns out that isn’t the case. (Most of the stuff in laundry soap these days has less to do with getting your clothes clean than it does with smell, wrinkles, or static.)

If you are thinking of throwing a scoop of OxyClean in with the "pure" baby laundry detergent, don’t. The oxygen bleach chemicals that give it the cleaning power it has are some of the most irritating ones out there when it comes to your baby’s skin.

So, what is a parent to do? Just get over it? After all, the baby doesn’t care if her clothes are stained, and most people are too busy looking at how cute she is to notice a stain on her back. Maybe, parents should just accept that baby clothing stains are a part of life.

WHAT?!?! Accept defeat? From a STAIN?  NEVER!

Best Baby Clothes Stain Remover

The Undefeated Daddy bought just about every stain remover and stain fighter on the shelves of the grocery store and at Target. There would be no permanent yellow poop stains on his kid’s clothes.

After trying out tons of different things it turns out the best baby stain remover is Zout. It not only gets out baby food stains, baby formula stains, and spit up stains, it also works really great on those poop stains that go unnoticed while baby is in their car seat, crib, or Jump-a-roo. Best of all, it comes in a spray bottle, so it is just as easy to cover large amorphous blob areas as it is to get a single strawberry jelly drop spot.

The most important baby stain removing tip is to rinse the clothing as soon as possible. However, do NOT use hot water. Hot water actually starts setting the stain even as you try and rinse it out. Instead, start with luke-warm water, or even cold water to rinse the stain out. Whatever is left, hit it with the Zout. Don’t be afraid to really soak it. I’ve never had it cause any discoloration even on super bright clothes or sheets.

Just let it sit there in a puddle on top of the stain until you are ready to do laundry. Obviously, if you let it sit there for five or six days, it might be too late; it isn’t magic. But, if you get baby’s stained outfit into the washing machine sometime that day or the next day, you should be fine. It shouldn’t be too hard to do with baby generating enough laundry for a small load every 24 to 36 hours :)

Technorati Tags: ,,,

Baby Rash and Toddler Rashes

diapers One of the most frustrating conditions for parents, especially new first-time parents, to deal with on babies and toddlers are rashes.  The difficulty is that because of their nature, rashes are easy to spot and difficult to ignore.  Whether it is skin redness, little spots on baby’s skin, or a rough texture on your toddlers arms or legs, rashes trigger a parent’s instinct to do something to fix it.

Unfortunately, the great majority of toddler rashes and baby rashes are non-specific skin conditions that require no real medical treatment.  It is frustrating to take baby to the doctor only to hear them say that it isn’t anything to worry about, and is probably just dryness or an allergic reaction to something.

Online medical research about skin rashes on babies and kids isn’t any more help.  About all anyone will find is the advice to try and figure out what is causing the allergic rash and to remove it from the baby’s environment.  This isn’t as easy as it sounds and can end up causing even more consternation among parents.

Cure for Baby or Toddler Skin Rashes

Since most rashes are non-medical allergic reactions of the skin, all any parent can do to make them better is try and reduce the allergens in the child’s environment.  Fortunately, this can be a relatively simple process for most skin allergies.

Whether it’s red skin, bumpy skin, or rough skin, the culprit is most often either bedding like sheets and blankets, or clothing.  The most common causes of such skin reactions is the perfumes, dyes, and preservatives in laundry soaps or bath soaps and other cleaning supplies.  Removing these irritants from baby’s life is actually fairly easy.

Healing Rashes With Laundry Soap

First, start by washing all of the child’s clothing AND bedding using Dreft.  Other companies make laundry soaps that are supposedly as free of irritants and chemicals as Dreft is, but since there is no way of knowing whether or not the latest “allergen free” or “pure” laundry soap is in fact just as good as Dreft, don’t take the chance just yet.  If you want to try a cheaper version of child laundry soap, do it later after you’ve eliminated baby’s rash and can judge whether or not the other laundry soap causes its return.

If comparing two products, always buy the one with no parabens.  Parabens may or may not have a cancer risk.  However, there is no doubt that parabens are a sign of cheap, low-cost, formulation and manufacturing since their only purpose is to allow a multi-year shelf life. 

You can find parabens on the ingredients list.  They will have names like methylparaben, propylparaben, or something similar.  It doesn’t matter what the chemical name is in front, a paraben is a paraben.  So anything-paraben is garbage.  If you can’t find a no parabens product, try a health food store or organic food store like Whole Foods. 

As a last resort, buy the product that has parabens the closest to the end of the list since ingredients must be listed from most to least by law. You’ll have to make a guess about whether having four different types of parabens lower on the list is better or worse than having one paraben higher on the list since their is no way to now how much they add up to.  This is one reason why you are better off just getting something without parabens instead.

Make sure and wash everything baby uses.  Otherwise, baby might still have the skin rash because of one blanket even though everything else is not causing any problems.

Be sure to wash any baby bedding including a child’s favorite blanket or wubby or whatever in HOT water.  Only hot water kills dust mites which might be the cause of the child’s skin rash.

Use the second rinse feature of your washing machine to give baby’s blankets, sheets, and clothes an additional rinse.  Don’t add anything like fabric softener, just get a second water rinse to ensure that everything possible is out.

Next, dry baby’s clothing and bedding without any dryer sheets or other additions to the dryer.  Yes, they’ll be staticy and wrinkled, but that isn’t the primary concern for this step.

Continue to do all of your toddler’s laundry in this way so that nothing comes back into contact with him or her that.

Healing Diaper Rash

Also, change baby’s diapers and wipes.  Try using one of the Huggies brand diapers if you are using others.  No matter what the label says, other diapers like Pampers have some sort of perfume or chemical in them that Huggies don’t seem to have.

To prove it, open a bag of Pampers or other diapers and put them in an enclosed space like a drawer or cabinet with the drawer or door closed.  Leave them overnight.  Then, open the cabinet and smell inside.  You’ll get a whiff of something, and that might be what is causing baby’s diaper rash.  (I haven’t experienced the same thing with Huggies, either the regular diapers or the Huggies Comfort Fit diapers.)

Also, switch to one of the “Free” diaper wipes.  You want one that has no perfumes AND no dyes.

While you are at it, buy a tube of Lotrimin.  Lotrimin is a fungal killer, or fungicide.  Most of the really painful looking bright red diaper rashes have some component of yeast infection with them.  Using the Lotrimin kills off this element.

Remember to change and wipe baby often when they have a diaper rash.  Most diaper rashes are caused by the chemicals in the child’s urine.  The longer they stay in contact with the skin, the more likely they are to cause a rash.

To get rid of a diaper rash as fast as possible, use non-perfumed diapers and wipes and change baby a lot.  By a lot, I mean too often, maybe every half-hour, but at least every hour, whether the diaper seems full or not..  At each of these diaper changes, put on some of the Lotrimin.  This will ensure that the toddler or baby’s skin gets the maximum possible amount of time without any urine chemicals on their skin and also that any yeast is killed without being able to re-spread.

 

Dreft – Yeah, It’s Worth It

laundry Ok, let’s get something straight. I do not pay for brand names if it’s the same as something else. I never have. I’m not the guy that pays $300 for jeans because it has some guy from New York’s name on them because they’re no better than WAY cheaper jeans. Now, on the other hand, I’m not the guy that cheaps out on stuff either. Wranglers and Levi’s suck and the only reason you ever wore them was because your Mom bought them for you. So, do I pay $50 to $80 for a pair of jeans. You bet.

The point? Everyone tells you about Dreft. It’s this magic laundry soap that you “just have” to use for your baby’s clothes. Whatever. I don’t buy Spring Scented Extra Bleach Phony Stain Fighting Smells Like Teen Spirit Laundry Soap in the first place. I’m sure mine is just fine.

Wrongo!

Here’s the deal. Your baby will grow up into a normal child with normal tolerances for stuff. But, the day she shows up in your house from the hospital she is, well… a baby, about her skin. It is SOOOO sensitive it isn’t funny. For some reason the Dreft Laundry Soap doesn’t have whatever it is that makes a baby’s skin freak out. That part where it says “Pediatrician Recommended”? They aren’t lying. The first thing they said to me when I called about the red lines all over her body was what kind of laundry soap am I using. The next thing they said was to “Try Dreft.” Guess what? Works.

Undefeated Daddy Recommended.