WootBot


quality posts: 14 Private Messages WootBot

Staff

Seventh Generation Diapers

Speed to First Woot:
3m 33.661s
First Sucker:
oliverlee
Last Wooter to Woot:
lunarcleo
Last Purchase:
9 months ago
Order Pace (rank):
Top 48% of Kids Woots
Top 45% of all Woots
Woots Sold (rank):
Top 7% of Kids Woots
Top 10% of all Woots

Purchaser Experience

  • 24% first woot
  • 10% second woot
  • 32% < 10 woots
  • 17% < 25 woots
  • 17% ≥ 25 woots

Purchaser Seniority

  • 21% joined today
  • 0% one week old
  • 2% one month old
  • 25% one year old
  • 52% > one year old

Quantity Breakdown

  • 45% bought 1
  • 26% bought 2
  • 9% bought 3
  • 21% bought 4

Percentage of Sales Per Hour

8%
3%
2%
1%
1%
4%
6%
10%
11%
9%
8%
6%
6%
4%
4%
4%
2%
1%
1%
2%
1%
1%
2%
1%
12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11

Woots by State

zero wooters wootinglots of wooters wooting



Quality Posts


katzchenkitty


quality posts: 1 Private Messages katzchenkitty

Last time my husband was in for 4 for size 4. 3 out of the 4 cases had Lorax print. The other one was plain. Only deal was in the packaging which had an expires offer for a free mp3.

Lorax or no Lorax, diaper does its job and very satisfied how much it holds. Who cares about the prints, its not like my kid takes off the diaper to look at the blurry Lorax logo.

ookamikun


quality posts: 1 Private Messages ookamikun

Got them as a "present" when my son was born.
They look used and they leak, big time. Don't even try using them for nights.
Nothing beats Huggies.

Samus


quality posts: 8 Private Messages Samus
ookamikun wrote:Got them as a "present" when my son was born.
They look used and they leak, big time. Don't even try using them for nights.
Nothing beats Huggies.



We too have noticed these leak more up the back than the old Pampers Swaddlers.

At this price they are cheap (cheaper than anything on Amazon.com) but Pampers and Huggies both have the wetness notification line down the front (gimicky but useful) and they seem to hold more/not leak up the back as often.

The Seventh Generation has caused no diaper rashes of any sort, so thats a plus, but we never had problems with the Pampers, either.

kwacknd


quality posts: 3 Private Messages kwacknd

I wonder if the eighth generation will finally evolve and poop in the toilet rather than a pillow? That would really make us seventh generationers feel pretty childish. Although wearing these diapers always makes me feel a little childish.

pupyluvr


quality posts: 44 Private Messages pupyluvr
ookamikun wrote:Got them as a "present" when my son was born.
They look used and they leak, big time. Don't even try using them for nights.
Nothing beats Huggies.



Well let's face it, Seventh Generation means they've been around the block a few times already so...

tyttebovs


quality posts: 2 Private Messages tyttebovs

We used these diapers for my son and never had any leaking issues. It's possible that they do not absorb as much as its toxic competitors, but it was always sufficient for us. When you learn (http://goo.gl/JmrWp) what's in ordinary diapers, the Seventh Generation diapers seem like an obvious choice.

chippvz


quality posts: 0 Private Messages chippvz

Is no one else happy that the condition of these is listed as NEW and not REFURBISHED?

martam98


quality posts: 0 Private Messages martam98

We've been using these since they first appeared on kid woot a while back, and love them. We've never had any leaking issues, and the price is competitive.

We use them when we leave the house and overnight when cloth diapering is not as practical (aka easy) for us; or when daddy changes diapers (because daddy doesn't do cloth diapers).

If you need stages not offered here, amazon has the other stages in both this version and apparently the newer version (8th generation?). Here's the link to the version offered here but in stage 4 http://amzn.com/B004KQBIUQ The other stages are available via a drop down field.

From that page there's a link to the newer version (which is also the same price as far as I can tell).

aotheoverlord


quality posts: 3 Private Messages aotheoverlord
tyttebovs wrote:When you learn (http://goo.gl/JmrWp) what's in ordinary diapers, the Seventh Generation diapers seem like an obvious choice.



At the end of the day, all diapers contain the same thing...

bbkf


quality posts: 1 Private Messages bbkf

last time i was in for 4. i ordered 2 4s and 2 5s. Only the 5s showed up to my door. Woot never refunded me for the 2 4s that didn't come. I had to "tell on them" by complaining to my credit card. waka waka

they work ok. I prefer pampers for their softness because these are a little stiff

angelasrock


quality posts: 0 Private Messages angelasrock

I've only ever used 7th gen diapers for my son and we love them. Love getting them at a great price when WOOT does these deals!

To the parents that rely on the "indicator stripe," do you let your kid run around in just a diaper all the time so you can tell when they need to be changed? It is generally pretty obvious when a diaper needs to be changed and these get squishy just like other diapers. You should just be checking your child regularly.

We use their overnight variety for long car trips and bedtime since they have extra absorbency.

woottoady


quality posts: 26 Private Messages woottoady

Seventh generation? No thank. We prefer our diapers new.

clangaiscioch


quality posts: 8 Private Messages clangaiscioch

Prefer these over the Lorax editions. They're cut better for our chunky kidlet. Both kids used Seventh Generation without any rashes. Other brands had them all broken out within 20 minutes. Worth it to not deal with cranky bums.

avens333


quality posts: 1 Private Messages avens333

I just finished our case of size fours for our one year old. Despite being fairly plain, they were a good diaper and did a great job of containing the fury of "Das Poopenhammer"

phileoca


quality posts: 7 Private Messages phileoca

size 5 is like a buck a diaper.
I'm not paying that much for that crap when my kid is just gonna crap in it.

My wife woots too

4boysmom


quality posts: 0 Private Messages 4boysmom
phileoca wrote:size 5 is like a buck a diaper.
I'm not paying that much for that crap when my kid is just gonna crap in it.




This would be true except you get 4 26 counts in a case so closer to a quarter a diaper ;).

redmondc9


quality posts: 0 Private Messages redmondc9
phileoca wrote:size 5 is like a buck a diaper.
I'm not paying that much for that crap when my kid is just gonna crap in it.



Exactly, Amazon.com sells for half that price. Why did I click on my Amazon email and came to woot where the prices are doubled? Should I cancel my subscription right now?

nsskaff


quality posts: 1 Private Messages nsskaff

We were introduced to these diapers when Woot had them a while back. I have found them to be just as leak-proof as pampers. May not be quite as soft as pampers, but my almost-two-year-old doesn't seem to notice the difference. The best part about them (besides being chlorine free) is that they don't smell! No overwhelming baby powder smell like when you open a box of pampers!

envoyxl


quality posts: 2 Private Messages envoyxl

First time father here... We just found out that she is pregnant and then I see these diapers on Woot. I figured I should probably stock up on a few but I don't know how many, or what size. My first instinct was to buy as many as I can, but then I realized money is not growing on trees and that I should only buy what I will need. Ultimately I am trying to convince her that we should use the washable diapers. Not that I am a tree hugger or anything, but I HATE buying stuff that I am just going to throw away. I don't even buy trash bags, I just don't throw leaky messy stuff in the trash can, and wash the trash can out if it does happen to get dirty. Anyways, I am thinking that I will use the washable diapers but will likely need disposables for when we are out in public for extended times and at night. I just think that the ease of use and reliability would be better. So for those of you who use washable diapers, how many disposables did you actually end up needing?

ssand23


quality posts: 14 Private Messages ssand23
envoyxl wrote:First time father here... We just found out that she is pregnant and then I see these diapers on Woot. I figured I should probably stock up on a few but I don't know how many, or what size. My first instinct was to buy as many as I can, but then I realized money is not growing on trees and that I should only buy what I will need. Ultimately I am trying to convince her that we should use the washable diapers. Not that I am a tree hugger or anything, but I HATE buying stuff that I am just going to throw away. I don't even buy trash bags, I just don't throw leaky messy stuff in the trash can, and wash the trash can out if it does happen to get dirty. Anyways, I am thinking that I will use the washable diapers but will likely need disposables for when we are out in public for extended times and at night. I just think that the ease of use and reliability would be better. So for those of you who use washable diapers, how many disposables did you actually end up needing?



I'm a mom of 4 kids ranging from 2 to 18. I cloth diapered 3 of my 4 children & am still cloth diapering my youngest now. Really, you don't need any disposables. I have traveled with cloth with out a problem but some prefer to do disposables if they are traveling (like going on vacation, not just out of the house for a few hours). There are so many different types of cloth diapers some even look almost just like a disposable, except that you can throw it in the wash. We have a reusable pail liner that goes in the diaper pail so we can just throw that in the wash with the cloth diapers. It really isn't much work (1 more load of laundry isn't much when you are already washing a bunch with a baby), they are no trouble, they rarely leak (we don't have big blow outs like disposable diapers are prone to) & diaper rashes are close to non-existent. I have no affiliation to this site but the CottonBabies .com site has a big selection of high quality cloth diapers in a variety of styles & price ranges. Kellyscloset .com is another great site for cloth diapers. And the plus is when you are done with them, people will buy them used. So you can make a good portion of your money back. I have saved thousands of dollars cloth diapering. Even if you do part time cloth & part time disposables, you are still saving money & the earth. And it's easy to get slightly addicted to buying cute diapers ;)

ssand23


quality posts: 14 Private Messages ssand23
ssand23 wrote:I'm a mom of 4 kids ranging from 2 to 18. I cloth diapered 3 of my 4 children & am still cloth diapering my youngest now. Really, you don't need any disposables. I have traveled with cloth with out a problem but some prefer to do disposables if they are traveling (like going on vacation, not just out of the house for a few hours). There are so many different types of cloth diapers some even look almost just like a disposable, except that you can throw it in the wash. We have a reusable pail liner that goes in the diaper pail so we can just throw that in the wash with the cloth diapers. It really isn't much work (1 more load of laundry isn't much when you are already washing a bunch with a baby), they are no trouble, they rarely leak (we don't have big blow outs like disposable diapers are prone to) & diaper rashes are close to non-existent. I have no affiliation to this site but the CottonBabies .com site has a big selection of high quality cloth diapers in a variety of styles & price ranges. Kellyscloset .com is another great site for cloth diapers. And the plus is when you are done with them, people will buy them used. So you can make a good portion of your money back. I have saved thousands of dollars cloth diapering. Even if you do part time cloth & part time disposables, you are still saving money & the earth. And it's easy to get slightly addicted to buying cute diapers ;)



P.S. When my son has been in the hospital (where they insist on disposables so they can weigh them for output), we brought our own disposabled & used the Seventh Generation. We were very happy with them, fit wise, leak wise & in general. I'd very much recommend these over the other major brands.

galaxiekat


quality posts: 1 Private Messages galaxiekat
envoyxl wrote:First time father here... We just found out that she is pregnant and then I see these diapers on Woot. I figured I should probably stock up on a few but I don't know how many, or what size. My first instinct was to buy as many as I can, but then I realized money is not growing on trees and that I should only buy what I will need. Ultimately I am trying to convince her that we should use the washable diapers. Not that I am a tree hugger or anything, but I HATE buying stuff that I am just going to throw away. I don't even buy trash bags, I just don't throw leaky messy stuff in the trash can, and wash the trash can out if it does happen to get dirty. Anyways, I am thinking that I will use the washable diapers but will likely need disposables for when we are out in public for extended times and at night. I just think that the ease of use and reliability would be better. So for those of you who use washable diapers, how many disposables did you actually end up needing?



We primarily use cloth diapers (fuzzibunz, ftw), but we use the seventh generation diapers for overnight trips to the grandparents, or if she's got a diaper rash. at that rate, we pick up a package of 30something for $10 at whole foods, and only in the size we need. She's seven months now, and we've only purchased 2 packages.

racheling


quality posts: 2 Private Messages racheling
envoyxl wrote:Anyways, I am thinking that I will use the washable diapers but will likely need disposables for when we are out in public for extended times and at night. I just think that the ease of use and reliability would be better. So for those of you who use washable diapers, how many disposables did you actually end up needing?


Don't buy a bunch of newborn diapers even if you want to have some disposables around. You don't know how big your baby will be or how fast he/she will grow out of the newborn size. It'll be a waste if you end up having half a case of diapers that are too small.