A little cue for a long night
Pajamas on. Sleep sack zipped. Lights down. The same familiar signal that bedtime has begun.
BEDTIME, MADE SIMPLER
Pajamas on. Sleep sack zipped. Lights down. The same familiar signal that bedtime has begun.
You already have enough to think about. The right warmth should not be another thing keeping you awake.
Parenting takes a lot out of your mind.
Some nights, the waking isn't what gets to you
Its wondering if the room is too cold or...
if the sleep sack is warm enough or...
maybe another layer
Simple decisions make everyday lighter
and more joyful
I remember feeling like,
"Whoa. OK. I got this.
I can breathe. I'm doing ok at all this!" Like the air cleared and I could see sunlight.
SAFE-SLEEP GUIDANCE
Parents want their babies warm and comfortable, but loose blankets and other soft objects do not belong in an infant’s sleep space. Research and national safe-sleep guidance support wearable blankets as a practical alternative to loose bedding when they are correctly fitted and appropriately used.
*The 42% figure comes from a national U.S. study of mothers. The 88% and 65% figures come from a randomized wearable-blanket intervention study. The intervention group was relatively small, and the trial did not find that simply providing a wearable blanket significantly improved overall adherence to all safe-sleep recommendations. This section summarizes research and national guidance; it does not claim that any product prevents SIDS or sleep-related infant death.
Safe sleep is not about adding more to the crib. It is about keeping the sleep space simple: baby on their back, on a firm, flat surface, with no loose blankets, pillows or soft objects. A properly fitted, non-weighted sleep sack can provide warmth without adding loose bedding—one simple part of a safer sleep routine.