They make overnight cloth diapering a breeze, and you can use affordable cloth diapering inserts
like flour sack towels (FST) and microfibre.
Not exact matches
Instead,
like other towels with «
flour sack» in their name, these towels are made of very thin cotton threads.
In the pictures it looks
like you rolled out the tortillas on a soft dish towel (
flour sack towel?).
I bought some
flour sack kitchen towels because they were the cheapest white cloth I could find (I didn't
like the idea of using cheesecloth), but I was dreading the idea of cutting them up.
Slower to absorb so should be paired with a quick absorbing insert
like microfibre or a
flour sack towel but they really absorb well and are trim!
Flour Sack Towels are also cheap, but find out why I don't
like those here.
You can also use our super-affordable organic
flour sack towels
like flat diapers inside a Flip!
The
flour sack towels I'm using in her diapers were
like mere tissues.
Instead of more conventional options
like inserts and prefolds, you can use
Flour Sack Towels, which are in the kitchen towel section of Wal - Mart or Target.
I used a large ruler to help align them and then carefully placed a thin
flour sack like towel over them, being careful not to move them before ironing them in place.
You think you can just toss him away
like a
sack of
flour?
Something just
like in this photo that popped up on Pinterest and gave me the inspiration for today's DIY idea: kitchen towels made from old - fashioned
flour sack material and stenciled in a French country color palette.
I might even feel
like stenciling some Spring - y scenes onto
flour sack towels which have been cut in half to make napkins.