Homemade Baby Wipes

How to Save Money and Clean Up Any Part of Your Baby

One way to save money and keep your baby's skin healthy is to make your own baby wipes. Homemade baby wipes are easy to make, inexpensive, portable and convenient. All you need to make them is a roll of Viva or Bounty
 paper towels, baby bath liquid, water, and a container with a lid. 

Consider the savings involved: commercial baby wipes cost around $3.50 per package. They contain chemicals, fragrance, alcohol or other skin drying ingredients and water. A roll of Viva or Bounty paper towels runs about $1. You cut the roll in half, so each roll makes two refills of wipes. Baby bath liquid is about $1-2, and you only use 2 tablespoons per container of wipes, so it lasts a very long time. You choose the kind of baby bath liquid you will use, so you can get organic or all natural at your own choosing.

To make homemade baby wipes, first choose a cylindrical container a little larger than a quart container. It should be wide enough to hold a roll of paper towels cut in half the short way (a little larger than a roll of toilet paper). Be sure the container has a lid. Cut an "x" slit in the top center of the lid.

Take the roll of paper towels, and using a sharp knife, cut it in half so that each half resembles a roll of toilet paper. Place the paper towel half into the container so that the cardboard tube inside is in reach from the top of the container.

In a separate container, mix together two cups of water and two tablespoons baby bath liquid. Pour the mixture on top of the paper towels in the container and wait about five minutes for it to soak into the paper towels. Then, carefully pull the cardboard core out of the middle. The innermost paper towel piece should come up the middle with the core. Pull it through the slit you cut in the lid of the container and close the container.

When you need another wipe, just pull the paper towel through the slit in the top, and because it is perforated, it will conveniently tear off at the perforation, leaving the next wipe ready to pull through when you need it.

Related information
  • It's easy to make your own baby wipes.
  • Homemade baby wipes are more natural than commercial wipes.
  • You can really save money by making your own baby wipes.
 
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We all have levels of green living that make us feel comfortable, Heather. And if you purchase Viva in a 6-pack roll, you reap the savings. I do appreciate recycling and do my part in other ways. Hopefully this article will be helpful to those who are interested. Since you're not, I wish you well with what you do.

Posted on 05/03/2009 at 1:05:25 PM

I am wondering where you live that a roll of paper towel costs $1, even back in '06? ESPECIALLY Viva...it is $2.30 a roll, I can't even get it for a buck with a coupon! I agree that making your own baby wipes IS cheaper...but NOT this way, and this definately is NOT the greener approach. I think that we should all be a little more concerned about the earth and a little less concerned about saving a buck. Make your own wipes out of cut up baby blankets, they work MUCH better than a paper towel and they are MUCH better for our planet, and YES they are MUCH cheaper than disposable wipes!!

Posted on 05/03/2009 at 1:05:30 PM

It's really easy - cut the paper towel roll so that it looks like two slightly oversized toilet paper rolls. Then put one of the halves in the tupperware canister with the core in reach. (You look from the top at a letter "O" shape. The core is upright in the middle). Pour your liquid ingredients over and let them soak in. Reach in and pull out the core, and the innermost towel comes out too. Thread that inside paper towel through the hole you made in the lid, put on the lid, and there you go.

Posted on 03/27/2008 at 8:03:33 AM

I'd love to see a picture of how you assembled this, as I am a klutz at following directions. This sounds like a wonderful thing to do for your baby!

Posted on 03/27/2008 at 7:03:46 AM

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