Thursday, 7 March 2013

I can't cloth diaper because...

Let me preface this by saying, there is nothing wrong with not using cloth diapers. Too often, some mamas get a tad sanctimonious and have a way of making others feel bad for their decision not to use cloth. If you don't want to use cloth diapers, don't use cloth diapers - but don't take anything I say the wrong way and assume I am judging you for your reasons or decisions. This blog post is not for those people, this blog post is for people who want to cloth diaper but feel there is something preventing them from doing so...I call these excuses. Some people cannot physically cloth diaper; I am not ignorant to this fact, I understand it is simply unrealistic for certain situations.
That being said, "I can't cloth diaper because.." is one of the most common phrases I see, and having done cloth diaper videos for 2 years now, I find myself regularly conversing with those people and trying to help them realize the "truth" about cloth diapers, and how their obstacle may be more easily overcome than they initially thought. So today I'm going to discuss some of those obstacles and maybe it will give even just one person a new perspective. Warning: Snarkiness ahead. 


1. "I can't cloth diaper because I can't afford it."
The average cloth diaper stash is $300 over 2 years. The average disposable cost over 2 years is $1700. You don't mean you can't afford it, you mean you can't afford it all right now. If you can afford disposables, you can afford cloth. If you need ideas of how to affordably cloth diaper, go here.
If your concern is that the upkeep of the diapers will break the bank, throw that thought away. My water bill went up like $2 a month after starting cloth. And even if it does go up a noticeable amount, there are tons of ways to cut your water consumption.

2. "I can't cloth diaper because my mom/sister/friend hated it."
My immediate response to this is "Do you parent the exact same way at this person? Are you identical in personality? Do you like the exact same foods and watch the exact same tv shows and date the exact same men?" Unless you are literally the same person (which last time I checked, is impossible) WHY would you assume that you won't like cloth diapering simply because someone told you they didn't like cloth diapering?
My second thought is, "WHY didn't they like cloth diapers?" I can honestly say, the only times I have ever encountered people who hated cloth diapering were due to one of two reasons, 1) They were doing it 10+ years ago when cloth diapers were totally different, or 2) They were doing it wrong. Not to be rude, but if you're doing cloth diapers the 'right' way...there's not much reason to hate it. If you're getting leaks, if you're getting rashes, if you're getting the stinkies..you're doing something wrong, and there are tons of ways to change it and fix it and make it right. If there's another reason they hated it (like they just didn't have time, or found it too difficult to comprehend) I'll go back to point #1, which is "are you the same person? Do you live identical lives? Do you have the same opinion on everything?" And if the answer is no, than stop living your life based on the way someone else lived theirs. Yeah, some people don't have time for cloth diapers, and some people just can't get into the groove of it, but that does not mean it will be the same for you.

3. "I can't cloth diaper because they stink."
Yep, pretty much anything you put next to your baby's butt is more often than not, going to smell like whatever came out of said butt. Diapers don't smell, your baby produces things that smell. And unless you're taking that disposable diaper directly outside to the curb for the garbage truck every.single.time you change a diaper, those disposables are sitting in the nursery smelling it up just as long as a cloth diaper would be.
If you're finding you have a stinky cloth diaper pail, make sure you're using a dry pail, with an open lid and an odor disc; one or more of those may solve your problem completely. Here's a video on troubleshooting stink.

4. "I can't cloth diaper because I don't want to touch poop."
You do know you're having a baby, right? Creating a human being and then coming in contact with their bodily fluids is kind of a given.

5. "I can't cloth diaper because they leak."
If you put them on too loose, yes. If you use the wrong diaper cream or laundry detergent, yes. If you leave it on too long, yes.
Cloth diapering may take some trouble shooting and more thought put into them than disposables, but cloth does not always leak. For me, cloth diapers never leak...especially for no reason. Click here if you're looking for a video on leaks.

6. "I can't cloth diaper because I have to change them more often."
More often than what? Shouldn't you be changing your baby's diaper when they pee or poop in the diaper? Whether you're using disposables or cloth, won't your baby be peeing the same amount? I'm not sure when as people we decided that a disposable diaper claiming to "be able to last 12 hours" was normal or acceptable...in fact, the thought of that truly disgusts me.

7. "I can't cloth diaper because my child has allergies."
You can't really technically be allergic to all cloth diapers. You can have an allergy to a certain material - so choose a different fabric. You can be allergic to a certain detergent - so choose another detergent. Cloth diapers are made from many things; cotton, bamboo, hemp, microfleece, suedecloth, fleece, wool, PUL..and the list goes on. If they are sensitive to a fabric, detergent or cream..use a different one.

8. "I can't cloth diaper because they cause rashes."
As stated above, your child may be sensitive to certain materials or ingredients in certain detergents, or even allergic..so good thing there are many different options to help fix this issue. If your child is, or you've seen a child be really red in the diaper area after wearing cloth, the number of possible reasons for this is huge; they could be sensitive to the material, you could have build-up issues, you could need more moisture wicking in the diapers, or you could not be changing them often enough. Again, once you troubleshoot this and really learn how the perfect way to cloth diaper your particular child, it should go smoothly. Link to a video on rashes. 

9. "I can't cloth diaper because I don't have time."
This one is legitimate. If you're working 18 hour shifts at your job every day of the week, and only come home to sleep...yeah, it sounds like cloth diapering probably isn't for you. If you have time to do your other laundry, you have time to cloth diaper. Cloth diapering takes no more time than disposables, besides the washing portion. I don't know how the myth got started that cloth diapering takes so much more time. How is it much different? You put a diaper on your baby's bum, a few hours later you take that diaper off, put it in a diaper pail and repeat. Where exactly is all this time consuming diaper changing occurring? Not in my house, that's for sure. Washing my diapers takes about 5 minutes. I put them in the washing machine and turn a knob, about 20 minutes later I go back in and turn another knob. Then I take them out to dry. *Yawn*, how truly exhausting. We're all busy, we all have more exciting things to do than wash diapers; it's about your priority level and what's important to you.

10. "I can't cloth diaper because I don't have a washing machine."
Yep, you can. Washing cloth diapers by hand in your tub is a possibility, or actually buy a hand washing machine..or get an apartment size/portable washing machine. There's also a laundromat, check out how much that would cost you. Keep in mind there are a lot of different types of cloth diapers, and some are actually quite friendly to use even if you don't have access to a washing machine.

11. "I can't cloth diaper because my child is in daycare."
These days, a ton of daycares are accepting cloth diapers, and if they don't it is often because they just don't know anything about it. Suggest to your daycare provider that you sit down and chat about cloth diapers and see if they are willing to be more open minded on the subject. As with your parent/friend/sister, they may not like cloth diapering because they don't know enough about it, or don't know the right information. If you truly  are passionate about cloth diapering, perhaps looking for a daycare provider whose beliefs better compliment yours is something to consider.

12. "I can't cloth diaper because my husband said no."
This would hands down, be the number one 'excuse' I see, and the inner feminist in me gets quite heated when I do. Sometimes I feel like I am in the minority of people who are in relationships founded on communication, compromise and open mindedness. Not one of us is in charge, and not one of us makes the decisions. There is no such thing as "I want to do this." with the response being "No." When my partner and I make any decisions, especially that affect our children, it is a conversation, always. No, this doesn't always result in one person 'winning' or getting exactly what we want, but we base our lives around things that make sense..and cloth diapering just makes sense. If something makes sense, we do it. If something doesn't make sense, we don't do it.
If there is no legitimate reason not to do something, do it. What exactly are your partner's reasons for not cloth diapering, do they make sense? What are your reasons for not disposable diapering, do those make sense?
Let's have fun with a little scenario that you are telling me is happening.
Scenario #1 You say to him "I want to cloth diaper."
He says no.
Result: You don't cloth diaper.
Let's switch that up.
Scenario #2 He says "Let's disposable diaper"
YOU say "No."
Result: You'll still probably end up disposable diapering?
That's literally what you're saying. First of all, I don't know why disposable diapers are the default. Secondly, how is that fair? If you are truly saying no to disposable diapering, than you wouldn't be doing it. Period. What you're doing is putting his word and opinion at a higher importance than yours. That doesn't sound like communicating and compromising at all.
I can't give an answer to the age old "how do I convince my partner to cloth diaper?" because I just don't get how that's a thing you should have to do in your relationship. Discuss, Inform, educate, not convince.

13. "I can't cloth diaper because I don't know how."
In this day and age of technology, you have access to anything and everything you could ever want to learn at your fingertips. As far as I'm concerned, the days of using the excuse "I don't know" are pretty much over. May I use this as an opportunity to self promote my cloth diaper vlogs:

Point is, if you want to do something - you will find a way to do it.
If you don't want to do something - you'll find any excuse not to do it.


This isn't an issue of wanting to cloth diaper or not, if you don't want to cloth diaper who gives a shit? Do whatever you want to do. But if you truly wanted to cloth diaper, you won't find excuse after excuse not to. Just do it and shut up about it :)

Love you
xoxo Lala

Friday, 22 February 2013

Drugstore BB Creams


BB Creams have taken over the drugstore, and there are way too many to choose from. In order to demonstrate how they look and feel, I made this (super long) video comparing the drugstore BB Creams. In this video you'll find a minute overview of each product individually with  a demonstration, a list of what that product promises to do, it's stats and my personal opinion of how it functions.

To avoid a whole blog post repeating what the video includes, I'm just going to add some pictures here of the swatches.




Here's the video!

Monday, 21 January 2013

Movies To See in 2013

Movies I'll Be Checking Out This Year (by release date)

Crossed out once I've seen it. 

January

Movie 43



February

Warm Bodies

March

Oz the Great and Powerful


April

At Any Price

May

Star Trek Into Darkness

June

World War Z

July

August


September

Thanks for Sharing
Prisoners

October

Don Jon
Carrie

November

About Time
Last Vegas
Kick-ass 2
The Hunger Games: Catching Fire


December

Anchorman: The Legend Continues

TBA



If you want to watch all the trailers, check out my playlist here:
2013 Movie Trailers

Friday, 4 January 2013

Home Build

I've dreamt of building my own home since I was little. When other first graders were sitting around doodling their family and friends, puppies and playgrounds...I was sketching floor plans. (I'm serious, ask my mom - I wouldn't lie to you guys.) I cut out pictures from magazines and designed the interior of my perfect home. Most of my friends were pretty surprised I ended up in the graphic design field instead of interior design, and sometimes I wonder what I would be doing these days if that were the case. I think interior design will always be a huge passion of mine.
But for every frilly throw pillows and paint swatch I dream about, I have ten times more interest in the practicality of a home; how it's built and how everything will function in every day life. 
So I have this running list of all the things I want to remember when we build our dream home (which will happen, even if not until 30 years from now). Some of them are aesthetics and some of them are about function. Keep in mind these are coming from a complete non-professional with no experience whatsoever in this field, I sound like a reliable source, now don't I? I am writing this to my future self. Let the lists begin!

No space left behind.

The number one annoyance people seem to have about their homes, is storage. I can easily function in a small home, but it has to have storage. Little spaces for small items, large storage for big items, just storage - and a lot of it. People tend to have an excess of "stuff", and as much as I can pretend I can easily lead a minimalist lifestyle, I just can't. So rather than move into a home or build a home with not enough storage, which isn't the easiest thing to change later; build your home with built-in storage, everywhere. And I really do mean everywhere.
No spaces left behind. Do something with that space instead.


Storage under the stairs:


     



In closets and mudrooms:

    





In your breakfast nook:

        



In the bathroom:

Around your tub, under cupboards, in seemingly useless spaces like blank walls/pony walls.


   
  
  

Hidden storage is my favourite. 
I have dreams about this stuff. I actually have this reoccurring one where I tell my contractor to build me a few secret tunnels in my house that take me to random rooms or secret nooks but NOT tell me about them...and I can just discover the magic and secrets on my own when I move in.
Hidden storage gives your home a cleaner, simpler more minimalistic look..and only you know the magical storage that exists.


Behind Mirrors




Under Cupboards (or utilize that space with something else)


  

Appliances

Hide your washer and dryer, your dishwasher - even your small appliances like a toaster!
Just make it blend in with the rest of the space. 








Convenient Things


These may not be the most important aspects of building a house..but if you're going to build it, you're going to built it once. Why not make it have as many every day conveniences as possible?

Plugs

How many times have you not quiiiiite been able to reach the plug you need? You want to plug something in but there are no outlets exactly where you are? I mean, first world problems for sure - but it can be an annoyance. Going back in later to re-wire doesn't sound like much fun to me. And cords laying all across rooms isn't the most eye appealing. So when you're building a house, put plugs everywhere. Places where they normally might not be. I would rather have too many outlets than not enough.

•Want to plug in your hair dryer? There's an outlet in the drawer.
•Want to charge your handheld vacuum? There's an outlet in the closet.
•Especially outlets in the kitchen; in the counters, on the side of the island, the pantry!
•And definitely outside. Less extension cords needed for your Christmas lights if you already have a plug outside on the house.






Thick edges on your deck

The norm for some, but doesn't even cross the mind of others.
Next time you have people over, you'll be thanking your overly-detailed self.
"Oh look, room to set my drink down. You ma'am, are a true genius."



Disposal

Want a way to easily get rid of garbage or recycling? Want it out of view?
Back your kitchen onto the garage. Trash chutes to bins in the garage.



Want easy access to laundry? An easy way to put clean laundry back where it belongs? Back your bedroom onto the laundry room.



Lights

Motion sensor lights in places like your closet, your pantry. Nothing more fun than having to try to turn on the lightswitch with your elbow or butt because your arms are full of groceries or clothes.





Other


Other things to do before/during the final build:

• Have tubing that runs from bottom floor to very top floor (attic is applicable). If you ever want to wire something new, this will make it easier.

• Have that same pipe installed from the house to the end of the driveway. It's always a possibility at some point to have to extend a drain pipe, cable, irrigation or gas line and doing that without disturbing the finished surface material is not easy. Even for something simple like future lighting, it can be a huge benefit. 

• Take pictures of the walls before sheet-rock goes up so you know how and where the wiring is set up, for ease of future access.


• A master light-switch in the bedroom. Hear a noise outside in the middle of the night? Turn on the outside lights from your own master bedroom.

• Pre-wire things. You may not set up a security system right away, but plan for it. You may not want to hook up speakers in every room of your house but at least wire for them for ease of set-up later. Wire for speakers outside! Music by the pool!

• During framing, have a pest line installed. Again, just for ease of access later in case of pest issues, you will appreciate it later. Preparation my friends!

• Ensure easy drainage in the garage for wet/snowy cars (proper pitch/grading). Unless it is still code in your area, don't let builder/inspector tell you that the garage floor needs to be lower than the house, this costs more money and isn't a legal necessity any longer. Insist on a vapour barrier for the concrete.

• Cast iron pipes for plumbing from second floor to lower floor so you don't hear rushing water through the walls.

• Make choices that are handicap accessible. Anyone could end up in a wheelchair at any time, or have someone visit with a disability. (One simple idea is to leave one corner of your house as a decent sized closet, the same size and location on each floor. If need be, even years and years down the road; you have an area that is empty and could be converted to an elevator. Even could be a selling point for future buyers, when you sell your home)

• Reinforce walls with where certain things are going to go, like hooks or towel bars.

• Heated floors. Not a necessity, but a lot more affordable that you may think! Even if just in the bathroom. Property value increases as well with this.

• Spend the extra money for top of the line doors/windows insulation. The last thing you want to do is pay for your mistakes later with a ridiculously high energy bill because you cheaped out on keeping your house insulated.

Phew. The End.
xoxo Kayla

Friday, 26 October 2012

New Gro-Via Products

New Cloth Diapers - the good, the bad and the ugly - "GroVia"

"In case you missed it, today I posted a video about all the new cloth diapers, products and accessories that have recently comes out. Now since I haven't done a video like this in exactly one year, I made sure to talk about diapers that have been released over the past 4+ months to make sure I was thorough. I did focus a lot on products released just this past weekend at the ABC Kids Expo 2012 as this is the time of year when companies usually release all the new stuff they have been working on. Since I did talk about so many products, I wanted to keep it to the point and not throw my own opinion in there (too often) so I thought I would do some blog posts on the products I was most excited about, some I was unenthused about..and maybe a few that I found just plain ugly. I'm definitely not including every single product mentioned in the video, or every single product released recently, just the ones I feel are worth mentioning. "




I'll start with the brand I was most impressed with this year; Gro-Via. They have really done well at bringing themselves up to par with BumGenius and Fuzzibunz when it comes to being the "well known" cloth diaper brands since they (The Natural Baby Company) established in 2008. Their website is simple and flawless, advertising is everywhere and they even got themselves into brick and mortar stores that people actually frequent. Last year they came out with a few new colours and training pants. I was elated over the 2 new colours (one which I mistakenly called "Smurf" in my video..yeah, it's "Surf") but not overly enthused with the trainers. This year, they went all out. First off, can we talk about this?

Yes ma'am, that is wool. I could not contain my excitement to see this new product. First off, awesome product choice. Wool is slowly creeping in and making people obsessed in the cloth diapering world. Sure, it's been around for a while and us cloth diaper veterans know all about wool - but it's getting much more notice these days and having a wool cover with your brand name - great decision. Those will sell out time and time again. Secondly, thank you for making wool more in the public eye. Being one of the top diaper companies right now, bringing fitteds and wool into focus is fantastic. Now us wool fanatics may seem a bit less crazy and there will be less "what's the deal with wool?" posts in every cloth diapering forum on the internet. Now it does only come in one colour, which I'm a bit bummed about - but I'm sure if when it's a success, more colours are on the way!

To go along with their wool, they released wool accessories. Thank the cloth diaper gods, a company that actually acknowledges diaper and customer needs? Magic. Too many times has a company come out with fitteds, but no covers. Wool, but no fitteds. Wool, but no wool wash. Wool and lanolin go hand in hand and I applaud Gro-Via for acknowledging that and not making their customers ask "how do I wash this wool? do I need to buy anything special to use it? I didn't know I had to do anything special with it." It's right there, in the store, next to the wool itself. 


Now you may think "hey Kayla, you talked about the wool and accessories - what about what actually goes under the wool?" Yes, the fitteds. I must mention them, mustn't I? I'm going to start off by saying I have no experience with the fitteds and pass no judgement on their usability. From what I've read from their reviews of people who have tried them out - they are great. From comparing them to the previous Kiwi Pie fitteds, they seem like they function just fine. But good lord, those prints. I feel like I am the only one who thinks they are hideous! Absolutely hideous. I like the idea they had, going with a more simplistic print, not too busy and small and repetitive. As a graphic designer, I can appreciate the thought for sure. But half the prints I can barely even distinguish what they are supposed to be. Is that a cat? A fish? A bear? Is this supposed to be under water? The prints are a bit large and tend to get cut off, not leaving the most appealing image. And even if they were a bit smaller, I will just be blunt and say I don't like 'em. I don't think they are as classy as other prints GroVia has come out with..although to be perfectly honest there are not many GroVia prints I am a huge fan of. I can't even get on board with the elephant one, and I am elephant obsessed through and through. I think some of the old Kiwi Pie fitteds were to die for. But to each their own; most people seem to adore the new ones. Oh shoot, I haven't even had a chance to talk about what they are made of or where they are made; which are great selling points. I guess I'm a "judge a diaper but it's printed cotton outer" kind of gal. 


Now, as to not leave this post on a sour note - the greatest announcement of all - the "GroVia Perfect Pail." Words fail me. It is wonderful. It is gorgeous. It is genius. It comes in all three of my favourite GroVia colours; vanilla, surf and cloud. The pail liner opens from the bottom. Smart.  The pail liner attaches.to.a.clothes.hanger. Let that sink in. It attaches to a clothes hanger. Obviously. Why wouldn't it? Why wouldn't any pail liner have the ability to go on a clothes hanger? GroGro..you've outdone yourselves. 


All in all, I'm impressed with what they've done. They've worked hard and come out with quality products that people are going to like. That wool will be in my hands very soon. They also released prefolds and new trainer colours, which is a bonus. 

If I had it my way? The fitted prints would have been cooler, more chic. The wool would have come out in a few more colours (like brown. that would be gorgeous), and the trainers would have come in some new cute prints. But that's just me :)

I'm not even going to acknowledge the price of these items because there has been to much complaint about it all over the internet and I'm not having it. You are paying for quality. You are paying for workmanship. You are paying for materials. And you are paying to have the products you use made in your own damn country, you are supporting your neighbours, your family and your friends. Shut up about it. 

xoxo BlogsAndLala (perhaps I should change it to ClothAndLala?)

Monday, 1 October 2012

Selling Cloth Diapers



I just made a new cloth vlog (my cloth diaper video series, which you can view here) all about buying and selling cloth diapers. It focused mostly on the selling portion, because that is the part that people have the most questions about.
Questions that I covered include "where can I sell cloth diapers?" as well as "how do I sell cloth diapers?" I also talked about buying and selling terms you may hear as well as just some general tips I have for selling cloth diapers online.
In this video, I mentioned a list of things to include in your "listing". A listing for cloth diapers is much like a listing for a house.

Listing a house requires sharing general information about the house (like the number of stories, the year it was built etc.) along with a price, some photographs and a description that's goal is to make the potential buyer interested and intrigued.
Now, unless you're talking about the coveted NIP Goodmama Rainbow Noir, the average used cloth diaper us going to get you nowhere near the kind of income that selling a house is..duh. However, if you take a real estate listing as your jumping off point, you can definitely make a nice cloth diaper listing just as successful.

Here is a list of things you should (or should consider) including in your listing.




Stay away from generic titles such as 'cheap diapers' or 'awesome diaper deal'. No one knows what the heck this means and is less likely to click on your listing. Also, many people use the search function on websites because they are looking for a specific brand or type of diaper. By completely omitting what brand of diaper you are selling in your title, it is going to see less traffic. Also, do not include too much information in your title. Save that for the description. A title that says "one-size new style brown fuzzibunz with snap closure EUC" is not appealing. Something simple like "One-size Fuzzibunz" should suffice.





Your photo is what is selling your diaper. Regardless of your catchy title, awesome description and price, nothing is going to sell your diaper like a photo. Nobody would buy a house without seeing it first, nobody would buy a car without seeing it first, and not many people are willing to purchase diapers without viewing a picture. First off, a title and description often can't do justice to what condition the diaper is really in and secondly, it creates a doubt that the diaper even exists (perhaps you are an internet scammer and completely illegitimate). Make sure your photo is clear, the lighting is good and the diapers look worthy of being purchased. Use natural light so you can get accurate colours and present them in a way that looks appealing.
If you can't possibly get a picture of your diapers (borrow a camera, use your cell phone), grab a photo off the company's website and use that. Keep in mind when taking your photos that often the buyer will want a picture of the inside of the diaper as well (to see wear and staining) so take those pics while you're at it.




Go to the company website and find out information about the diaper. Make sure to include the brand (if you know it) and the sizing (if you can find that out). Including the weight range is helpful to the buyer so they don't have to look it up themselves. Also include what TYPE of cloth diaper it is. Is it a prefold, an all-in-one, a fitted? If you're unsure, check out my cloth vlog explaining the different types of cloth diapers. Include what fabric it is made from (some people only like natural fibres and lean towards listing with those qualities) and if the diaper has inserts, what those are. Microfiber? Cotton? Are you including one or two? What closure does it have, snaps or velcro? If there is no closure, remind them of this.




How long you used the diaper will help the buyer to know what kind of quality to expect. You can use terms like "NIP, EUC, UC" which are explained in the video above, but nothing is better than a clear, concise description. If you used and washed the diaper daily for two years, express that. If you used the diaper in a large rotation for only a few months, explain it that way. Make sure to divulge any flaws with the diaper. If there is a loose snap, a hole, a weird smell, non-sticky aplix..type it out. You may feel like this is making your diaper not sound as good, but you need to be honest. If you don't divulge the imperfections, the buyer will in turn not get what they thought, and negative feedback looms just around the corner. Make sure to be honest, and price accordingly.




This is the make it or break it, the selling point. No matter how much you love that mansion with 10 bedrooms and a chef's kitchen..you're not going to buy it if it's out of your price range, plain and simple. Most people purchasing cloth diapers have a price point in their head that they are looking for, a budget that they are trying to stick too. A large amount of cloth diaperers ARE cloth diapering to save money. If your price point is simply too high..people will glance right over your listing and move on. Your price needs to be realistic. Search around at what that diaper has sold for in the past, but be willing to negotiate if your diaper is not a hot commodity at the moment. If you're not in dire need to sell your diapers, wait it out a few months. For example, Goodmamas will go in and out of "style". One month, you can get your hands on used ones for $15, and other months you will be lucky if you can find one for under $50. It may seem crazy, but that's the way the cloth diaper world works. If you have a hot item, make an auction and sell to the highest bidder.





Unless you are planning on sending the diaper out the moment you get your payment, share in your listing when you plan on shipping it out. If you can't ship until next Friday, let your buyer know that so they know when to expect their purchase. Also, make sure you mention shipping cost. Some websites will have a section where you can add that, and some will not. Let your potential buyers know if the shipping cost is included in the price (PPD) or if they need to pay extra (and how much).
If you only want to get paid via funded Paypal, or echeck - include it in your listing. If you're going to be picky about it, you need to put it out there. Don't wait until someone has already clicked "buy now" before letting them know if you want to be payed a specific way.
Also include where you are willing to ship, and the accompanying price. If you only want to ship within the Unites States, say so. If you are willing to ship Internationally, share that information. Also keep in mind shipping cost. You can definitely list multiple shipping options and costs depending on where the buyer lives.




There are a few others things sellers often include in their listing that you may want to consider for yours.
1. If the items are coming from a smoke free and/or pet free environment. Some buyers will ask later, so this will help skip that step..but if you ARE indeed a pet friendly and/or smoke friendly home..it is common courtesy to let your potential buyers know that.
2. If the items have been used with "cloth diaper safe" accessories. Some buyers do not care, while some care a great deal if the diapers have been used with a non-safe detergent or diaper cream. You can divulge this or not, the majority of buyers will not ask. However, if your diapers are having severe repelling problems, again common courtesy would suggest you mention this.