When Ash and Gracie were infants, I spent hours cleaning up spit up messes. I didn't know what to do to make this problem go away. We changed formulas, put Mylicon in their bottles, didn't move the girls at all for thirty minutes after a feeding, and so on. The word "inconvenient" doesn't even begin to describe this aggravating problem. Eventually though, I came to terms with the fact that we just had babies who were going to spit up a LOT. And I also realized that it was highly unlikely I was the only person with this problem.
It was around this time that I came up with the idea for our blanket. How cool would it be if a mom could just take the dirty portion of a blanket off and throw it in the hamper with the rest of her baby laundry, instead of having to wash an entire blanket for a mess the size of a quarter? Immediately, the benefits of this idea started pounding away in my head. Wow! I would save so much time at night not having to do two loads of just blankets. Wow! I wouldn't have to pick the girls up off the blanket and move them onto a new one. Wow! Justin will be so pumped if I actually save us some money on our water bill. Little did I know, the unknown benefits of this product would start revealing themselves once the blanket was actually created.
The process of inventing anything is slow and complicated. So imagine being in my situation, knowing exactly what you want to make, but having absolutely no idea how to make it. I'm embarrassed to say that before this process, I had never even picked up a needle and thread, let alone worked a sewing machine. My first batch of patches were laughable. I had fleece fabric with HUGE metal snaps put all over the edges. When you attempted to unsnap a patch from the blanket, not only was it a struggle, but most of the time you would tear the rest of the blanket up in the process. Not exactly the result that I was hoping for. So I thought, smaller snaps, thicker material. I got the thickest fleece I could find and the smallest metal snaps made, thinking to myself, "Okay, I've got it this time." Nope. Again, laughable. The snaps would pull right out of the fleece, and when you lay down on the blanket, you may as well have been napping on a bed of rocks. It was at this point that Justin suggested plastic snaps. Of course, I at first protested, simply because it wasn't my idea, but eventually I admitted that his idea was in fact better. Justin also came up with the idea of quilted cotton patches instead of fleece. Again (and you will not hear my say this often), Justin was right. With a cotton quilt, we could put as much batting into the blanket as we wanted, making it softer and more comfortable for a baby.
After many, MANY attempts (and one sewing class for Justin... shhhh, don't tell him I said that) I decided that we needed help. I had put together a detailed plan book, describing how to create these patches... we just couldn't do it ourselves. I sat down with a wonderful woman named Dana in Plano, who seemed skeptical of my idea at first, but eventually realized just how cool this product could be if made correctly. Dana told me to give her a week to make me a full blanket of patches. This was fine, considering it would have taken me at least a year. When I returned to her house a week later, I was absolutely blown away. Wow... this blanket was really as wonderful as I thought it would be! Dana had created twelve patches, exactly as I had seen them in my head. The plastic snaps were embedded into the edges of each patch in order to keep them hidden, and thick polyester batting was placed between the cotton material I had chosen for Dana to quilt together. It was everything I had ever wanted it to be!
I'm not going to bore you with the details of how we found a manufacturer to make our blankets, or the extremely long process in getting there. However, if you are starting your own business and need some tips, please let me know!! About two months after Dana made us a prototype, I found out I was pregnant with Hattie. To give you an idea of how long it takes a prototype to become a product, I got a phone call the morning that Hattie was born, and a trucker informed me that he had 1,000 blankets for me and was waiting at my house. Uh, yeah... like THAT was going to happen. I had waited almost a year for these blankets to be in my hands, and they had to pick the one day I couldn't be there to deliver them. It all got straightened out, and we had our blankets (we no longer had room in our garage to park our cars, but we had our blankets). Okay, so now that we had our blankets, they should just start flying off the shelves, er, the garage floor, right? Wrong. But we'll have a marketing lesson later :)
I was completely in love with this sweet new baby girl. Hattie was, and is still (knock on wood) the easiest baby I've ever known. She sleeps, she eats, she poops, and she lets you know when any of those needs aren't met. But I'm learning that even the best babies spit up. Yes, here we are again, with a baby who likes to puke up half her meal. Hmmmm.... if only there were a blanket that had patches and could save me from having to wash loads and loads of blankets every night. But there is!! Yes, I have been using the product I myself invented, and let me tell you, it WORKS. When Hattie was a newborn, we would place her on four patches instead of the standard nine that we have decided is a "full blanket". Why? Because she wasn't going anywhere! But she WAS spitting up. It was perfect. She would spit up, and I would have plenty of spare patches to change the dirty ones out with. Every time she spits up, I'm almost excited, simply because I see my hard work in action. And now Hattie is four months old, spitting up a little less, and I have the blanket expanded out to its full nine patch size, and also use the spare patches as burp rags occasionally. You're probably saying, "Wait a minute. Could it be that this already fantastic blanket is muli-functional?" Why, yes it is.
Not only is the Snap 'n Grow blanket great for barfing babies, it's also great for when your baby starts needing more room to move around. You just add more patches! Right now, we have a full blanket snapped together on our living room floor, and it's where Hattie spends 75% - 80% of here time. She is obsessed with rolling onto her tummy, and when she does, she stares with a certain intensity in her eyes at the cute animals on the patches (yes, there was one things I was able to do myself... and that was the artwork for the patches!). Okay... so it's good for spit up, expanding, AND tummy time? Yes it is. But here's the kicker...
As I played with Hattie on the blanket, I realized I hadn't heard Ash and Gracie talking in awhile. Silence is golden, but it's just plain scary with three year olds. I turned around and saw the two of them sitting directly behind me, each with patches in their hands. Gracie had taken one patch and had somehow snapped it together to make a really cute blanket for her baby doll to squeeze right into. Ashton was paying no attention to anything around her except the snaps on the four patches she had claimed. She snapped them all together, then unsnapped them, over and over again. The wheels started turning in my head. Could it be? Is it possible that this blanket could be fun for toddlers too? And the answer, once again, is yes.
We spend so much time trying to teach our children new things that we never take the time to realize what they're teaching us. Because of Ashton and Graysen, I now have an awesome invention that started out just for infants, and has now become just as fun and useful for a three year old. The snaps are a wonderful tool for developing their fine motor skills, and the girls love the idea of being able to make the blanket as big or small as they want. Plus, I never have to take it away from them! No crying children wondering when their blankie is coming out of the washing machine. You only have to take the patch away that's dirty! *Sidenote* I've even had one mom tell me she used the blanket on her toddler's bed while potty training, so she didn't have to take off the entire sheet that had been soiled, just the dirty patch. I wish I could pat myself on the back for figuring out all of the uses for this blanket, but it's been the people around me using it who have taught me. Thank you ALL.
Okay, I think that everyone reading this has probably had their fill of hearing about my blankets for the day. And besides, I've got a screaming baby and two very impatient three year olds who don't yet understand the world of blogging. If you would like to learn more about our blankets, or see what they actually look like, please visit our website at www.feistybambini.com. Keep in mind that I created the website and I'm still learning :)
So until next time... I hope you all have a wonderful day and get more sleep than I do tonight!
Ginnie
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