What are your thoughts? I just came across this
website.
Here are some great things about the wwoobies:
- They Look Great ~ they give ordinary baby duds that extra little something
- They Stay On ~ babies that tear off hats, constantly keep them on because they can't see the brim
- They are Soft and Comfy ~ no rough or scratchy Velcro
- They Support Children in Need ~ 25% of our Proceeds go directly to Children who need help
- They Prevent Sun Exposed Scalps in the summer and keep heat in during winter. Extreme weather can be dangerous for infant scalps and a WWooBie™ stays in place even on the playground!
Would you put one on your child? Do you like them? What do you think?
Comments (29)
OMFG SO CUTE!!! I love them! I will definitely buy when I have kids. I like this alot better than those STUPID stretchy headbands with the bow. It looks like it's squeezing the baby's head...
I would try one, but I think she'd still pull it off.
i guess i am weird because I do not find these cute at all.
Cute! :)
My daughter will wear hijab from the time she is maybe1.5 years old. Hijab isn't an obligation until she hits puberty (8 years old according to http://puberty101.com/girls/stagesg.html) but she'll have to start wering hijab at 7 becasue that is when as a Muslim I have to start teaching her how to pray. It's best if my daughters start wearing hijab young, that way they will learn about hijab earlier and be more likely to wear it when they are obligated to. I think baby Muslim girls in hijab are cute.
I doubt I would try one, but if I did, I believe my daughter would still pull it off. She tears off hats that don't even had a brim, like beanies and such.
I would probably consider them for my 21 month old twins who are outside quite a bit because I worry about their scalp getting burned. They don't have much hair and it's very fair. But I can't get past that it makes kids look like pediatric cancer patients.
@bubbelcat@xanga - " But I can't get past that it makes kids look like pediatric cancer patients."
That's what I thought, too.
@bubbelcat@xanga - I have the same problem with my 22month old, and I picked up a organic sun screen for toddlers which I run through his hair before we go out (I have to put it on the bottom of his feet too). It works and has none of the nasty chemicals regular sun screen does.
adorable... i just wouldnt use it for my child lol.
not at $17 a piece.. Maybe $10 but no way will I pay that much for a hat.
I find them cute.
I don't really like head scarves in general, but if I did (I always change my style, lol) I would buy one. They're adorable.
no... i find those odd and not cute at all...
its KINDA cute. i'd only maybe use it to protect my kid's head from the sun
I don't have a kid, but I think those are adorable.
Ew. No. Unless a Halloween pirate...
@VampireOfSeduction@xanga - Agreed. They should include an eyepatch in your purchase!
If I have a kid who won't keep a hat on, I might try these so they don't sunburn their scalp... But wouldn't they still end up burning their face wearing these?
@JJPrint3rd@xanga - I feel the same.
@muslimmom - I don't think this is a hijab. These are baby bandanas basically. I don't have a problem with hijabs at all, but that is not what this and I don't think it is what the author was asking about. Basically, would you put a mini-bandana on your baby? Clearly, you would. I think I would too for that matter, but I don't see how these would be considered hijabs.
Hmm they ARE pretty cute. I'd rather make them than buy them though.
@bubbelcat@xanga - that's the same image I get.
Confusion burns in me:
-My pragmatic side says, why? For what reason? While something inside me, maybe the parent-to-be (I don't have kids and am a college guy) finds it ADORABLE, capslock'd.
No.. I really don't think they look great.