Husband and wife design duo, the Novogratz, just launched a stylish new baby collection on Amazon and you’re going to want it all.

The Novgratz Kids and Baby Collection for Amazon features mid-century modern style with fun pops of color and designs kids will love even as they grow. The line includes cribs, storage, rugs, lamps and artwork and everything is under $400.

Novogratz Harper Crib

This sleek 3-in-1 crib transitions from baby to full toddler bed in style.

Starting at $299.

Novogratz Harper Changing Table

This changing table is so well designed you'll want to keep it as a staple years after the diapers are done.

Starting at $203.

Novogratz Harper Dresser

Another statement piece that you'll be comfortable using even when you're cramming teen sized clothes inside.

Starting at $296.

Novogratz Floating Cloud Lamp

Light up your nursery with this dreamy wall lamp.

$25.99

Novogratz Atticus Noah Area Rug

This whimsical rug will have you daydreaming of beach days while you play.

Starting at $106.

 

—Shahrzad Warkentin

All photos: Amazon

 

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I was among the first of my friends to have kids, which meant navigating the baby gear scene somewhat blindly. I walked through the aisles of Babies ‘R’ Us and Buy Buy Baby scanning whatever seemed useful, but not having much product advice beyond what my mom found useful 25 years ago. It wasn’t until I joined a playgroup of other new twin moms and took some parenting classes at the 92nd Street Y that I could chat about and see park blankets, pacifiers and push toys in action.

Raising kids inevitably means acquiring stuff. When you live in a two-bedroom apartment, in New York City space is at a premium. If something is no longer useful, I happily toss it or pass it along to a friend. I’ve compiled a list of sanity-saving gear for the first five years. These 50 products are worth the precious square footage they take up. If only I knew about them when registering!

Essentials for Sleep

  1. Summer Infant SwaddleMes and Halo SleepSacks: Velcro makes for a great “baby burrito.” I find that swaddled babies sleep longer because their flailing arms don’t startle baby awake. Thanks, Dr. Harvey Karp and The Happiest Baby on the Block!
  2. MAM pacifiers and clips: Because there is no “upside-down,” baby can more easily pop these pacifiers back in. Glow-in-the-dark versions are brilliant. Clip a pacifier to baby’s car seat and carrier so you don’t have to fumble to find it.
  3. Brookstone sound machine: My baby lets out a contented, sleepy sigh when she hears that rumble.
  4. Blankets and Beyond security blanket animals: Introduce a lovey to your baby that you can replace if lost. Take a picture of all lovies with their labels visible to simplify your hunt for a replacement later on.
  5. Carter’s Zip-Up Sleep & Play: Because who wants to search for snaps during the 3 a.m. diaper change?

Essentials for Food

  1. Medela bottles: I pumped right into these and used them to feed my twins. The tops have just the nipple and a ring. Less parts = less dishes.
  2. Nursing pillows: Double Blessings for twins, Boppy for singletons. These double as tummy time supports and lounge chairs.
  3. Medela Easy Expression Bustier: Hands-free pump bra so you can relax, be productive, or just imagine you’re Madonna while pumping.
  4. Tovolo silicone ice cube tray: Freeze homemade baby food purees. Pop out and store frozen cubes in Ziplocs. Defrost a cube or two for a quick meal.
  5. Green Sprouts waterproof bibs: Rinse off and hang to dry for the next meal.
  6. Fisher-Price SpaceSaver high chair and portable booster seat: These buckle onto regular adult chairs. The high chair cover easily snaps off to machine wash. Portable option is useful for long trips or dinner at a friend’s house.
  7. Munchkin SureGrip straw cups: We used these to transition off milk bottles at a year and still use them at 5 years.
  8. Munchkin Snack Catcher: Minimize spills and encourage independence.
  9. The First Years Take & Toss plastic bowls, sippy cups, straw cups, and divided plastic plates: We use these daily for cereal, water, smoothies and meals. Avoid the dreaded, “Mom! My food is touching!”
  10. Contigo water bottles: My favorite yet in the battle against leaks.
  11. Beech-Nut fruit/veggie purees in disposable pouches: I use these on-the-go snacks to keep my baby awake in the stroller while rushing home for a nap. They are also good for incorporating vegetables that baby would spit out if served straight up.
  12. OXO Tot dishwasher basket and drying rack: For the abundance of bottles, sippy cups, pacifiers, pump parts, straws and small accessories that are now part of your life.
  13. IKEA adjustable-height toddler table and chairs: Great for meals and activities as kids grow.

Essentials for Travel

  1. Lillebaby Nordic carrier: Great for naps on-the-go and for boarding airplanes with pre-walkers.
  2. Baby Jogger City Select double stroller: As a city family, our stroller acts as a car. The sturdy wheels can handle snow, rocks, curbs and stairs. We’ve used various combinations and directions of car seats, stroller seats and a glider board.
  3. Summer Infant 3D Lite: This lightweight umbrella stroller folds easily as we hop on the bus.
  4. Graco Snap N Go stroller frame: The infant car seat easily clicks in, which is great for those first few months before baby can sit up in a regular stroller seat.
  5. Graco Nautilus 65 LX 3-in-1 Harness Booster: This car seat transforms into two stages of booster seats for your growing child. My kids love to store their treasures in the cup holder and side cubbies.
  6. JJ Cole BundleMe stroller bunting: Keeps baby cozy with just a light jacket. I wish I could crawl into this “stroller sleeping bag” on blustery mornings!
  7. Aden + Anais muslin blanket/nursing cover: An airy cover-up for babies who are nursing or sleeping in a carrier or stroller.
  8. PackIt freezable lunch box: Built-in ice packs save me a step on busy mornings.
  9. Graco Pack N Play: Sets up in a minute. The basic version is affordable enough to keep one at each grandparent’s.
  10. Usborne wipe-clean activity books: Keep kids busy on airplanes and cars and while waiting at the doctor’s office or restaurants.

Essentials for Health and Safety

  1. DenTek Kids floss picks: These plus power toothbrushes and fluoride toothpaste are my best friends in the fight against cavities.
  2. Summer Infant Ultimate Crib Sheet: This pad snaps to crib slats for easy changing, so there’s no need to hoist up the mattress. This is especially helpful when kids get sick or wet the bed at night. The three layers serve as a sheet, absorbent mattress pad, and waterproof pad.
  3. Crib that converts to a toddler bed with side rail: Encourage independence, save your back and prevent falls. This setup can easily last for four years.
  4. Safety 1st Finger Pinch Guard: Having these on my doors has saved us from many tears! Easily removable.
  5. Puddle Jumpers: Life jackets that let kids practice their swimming strokes.

Diapering and Potty Essentials

  1. Walmart Parent’s Choice diapers: Best deal out there. Size 1s are less than 10 cents each! With a wetness indicator strip, there’s no guessing whether baby needs a change.
  2. Babies ‘R’ Us disposable changing pads: These are especially helpful when public restrooms don’t have changing tables and who knows what’s on the floor. I keep one on my changing table at home in case of a blow-out.
  3. Aquaphor Healing Ointment: Skin protectant for diaper rash, drool rash, chapped lips, irritated skin and minor cuts.
  4. Playtex Diaper Genie: I spent an entire year with three kids in diapers. Tossing diapers in the outdoor trash just wasn’t going to happen and this was great at locking away odors.
  5. Babies ‘R’ Us diaper booster pads: Add absorbency to nighttime diapers.
  6. Baby Bjorn Potty Chair: With my twins, it was useful for each to have his own potty so we could have “potty parties” together. My third went right for the regular toilet seat with the help of a step stool.

Essentials for Play

  1. Fisher-Price Rainforest Bouncer: A great place to set baby down during your speed shower.
  2. Infantino Twist and Fold Activity Gym and Play Mat: This easily collapses to store under a couch.
  3. Lamaze toys: These colorful, textured toys clip onto car seats and strollers so they don’t fall overboard like our Sophie La Girafe did.
  4. Fisher-Price Jumperoo: Gives baby a new vantage point and works the leg muscles.
  5. Land’s End and KEEN water shoes: Sturdy treads prevent playground wipe-outs during sprinkler season.
  6. Micro Kickboard Mini Scooters: Three wheels help new balancers. A solution for longer walks as you transition out of the stroller.
  7. JJ Cole Outdoor Mat: This water-resistant blanket folds compactly into its own bag and is perfect for the park or beach.

Essentials for School

  1. Skip Hop Zoo backpacks: The smallest doubles as a safety harness. The regular size works well for preschool.
  2. Pottery Barn whiteboard calendar: Home base for coordinating school events, playgroups, playdates, birthday parties, babysitters, date nights, Sunday school volunteering, work commitments, doctor’s appointments, vacations, visitors and community events for our family of six.
  3. Plastic homework folders: Protect papers from that inevitable water bottle spill.
  4. Inchbug labels: Dishwasher- and washing machine-safe adhesive name labels. Perfect for labeling clothes, backpacks, folders, water bottles, lunchboxes and shoes. Reusable Orbit Labels are great too.

Expecting moms: I hope you’ll use this as a registry cheat sheet. New moms: I hope this will save you time as you weed through the gazillion products in the baby gear industry. Veteran moms: Thanks for chatting up your gear with me. Let me guess, did you just nod your head as you checked off all of these beloved items stocked in your own home?

Featured Photo Courtesy: tung256 via Pixabay
Kristin Van de Water
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Kristin Van de Water is a former journalist and teacher who relies on humor, faith, and her mom crew to get her through the day. Raising four kids in a two-bedroom NYC apartment, Kristin is always on the lookout for life hacks to save time, space, money, and her sanity.

My kids aren’t babies anymore, but as the founder and CEO of Babylist, I spend all day talking to new parents and checking out gear. One of the pieces of advice I give to new parents: Invest in products that will take you through not just those first months, but the first years.  Check out my six, must-picks, below.

  1. Stokke Tripp Trapp Highchair: Just having a piece of baby furniture this sleek and simple is benefit enough for many new parents. But this high chair is designed to have more than just good looks. It’s cleverly designed to support your child as she grows, and you can make adjustments to the seat and footrest to accommodate everything from a baby (with the Baby Set that’s sold separately) to a 250-pound adult.
  2. Hatch Baby Rest Night Light and Sound Machine: When your baby is new, the Hatch Baby Rest uses sound and light to create a “custom sleep environment” for your child, which you can program via your phone. It also makes routines infinitely easier. One quick tap turns it from soothing white noise machine into a night light that’s indispensable for late-night feedings. Later, as your kid grows into an early-rising toddler, program the “OK-to-Wake” indicator to signal when it’s okay to get out of bed and wake up mom and dad. You’ll be incredibly thankful for the extra sleep you get.
  3. Skip Hop Explore and More Baby’s View 3-Stage Activity Center: One purchase, years of play. This activity center transforms alongside your child to fit kids’ needs as they grow. For infants, it’s perfect for self-contained play (so you can do the dishes or get a much-needed shower). Later, it converts into a play station your child can cruise around while he learns to walk, and finally a sleek, seamless toddler table perfect for tea parties and coloring alike.
  4. Babyletto Hudson Crib: This convertible crib is not just beautiful—behind those mid-century modern lines is a practical solution for a growing child. This crib comes with a kit that converts it into a toddler bed that works for children up to 50 lbs. You can buy a conversion kit to turn it into a full-fledged daybed, as well. In theory, this bed could see your child all the way to college! Pro tip: For any crib you want to convert, buy the kit around the same time you buy the crib. Cribs get discontinued all the time and you don’t want to have to troll the backwaters of the internet to find a conversion kit later.
  5. Nest Cam: Okay, technically, the Nest Cam isn’t a baby monitor. It’s a home security camera that we count among our favorite baby monitors at Babyist. Turns out, the features that are great for home security are perfect for a baby monitor —from live streaming on your smartphone to two-way communication so you can soothe your little one from anywhere. As your child grows, and you no longer need a baby monitor, you can use it to keep an eye on your pet, yard, or empty home while you’re out.
  6. Ju Ju Be Everyday Tote: This diaper bag has tons of pockets for easy organization, an anti-microbial lining to prevent bacteria from growing when you accidentally throw in a damp wipe or a questionable banana. Best of all, it’s sturdy enough to last, and stylish enough for you to carry once you no longer need to lug around diapers.

 

 

Natalie is the founder of Babylist, an online registry platform for new and expecting parents. The idea came to life after Natalie was pregnant with her first son and couldn’t find a registry that met her needs. Today, more than $12MM in gifts are given using Babylist.  

Photo: Kristin Van de Water

“Where can I put this, so nobody gets it?” my daughter asked, holding the half-finished art project she was working on as I pushed three kids and my husband out the door for 8 a.m. school drop-off.

“In your drawer,” I suggested, knowing my two-year-old wouldn’t venture into that off-limits territory while her older siblings were at school.

In our family, each kid has one drawer in their bedroom entirely to themselves, where they can store their most prized possessions. When you’re used to sharing a room with three siblings, getting a whole new drawer is like being gifted a mansion. Raising four kids in a two-bedroom apartment requires some ninja organizational skills plus one essential rule: everyone—and everything—needs a place to be.

Most of our apartment is communal. We share school supplies and spots at the table, bathrooms and bins of books, toys and technology. But to coexist peacefully, it’s crucial to give our kids one thing: a sliver of personal space.

Shortly after my youngest turned two, we traded our crib and toddler bed for a second set of bunkbeds. With the newly available floor space, I was determined to give my kids a storage area that was completely their own. I considered large cubed cubbies, a bookshelf, a desk, inboxes and treasure chests. 

We ultimately decided that getting a second dresser would be the most useful for storing their clothes, which just keep getting bigger each year! It also provided an extra drawer for each child to use as the kid version of a junk drawer. The great part about a drawer is that everything inside is out of sight rather than an eyesore.

This drawer is where they can store the special projects they are working on or toys they want to keep out of their siblings’ hands. Prizes from school carnivals, goody bag trinkets and old Valentines find their home in the drawers. My son parks a toy semi-truck, loaded with Pokemon cards, in the drawer under his bed. My older kids store their Bibles and chapter books in their drawers. My two-year-old tucks away some plastic cupcakes, GoldieBlox figurines and a book her sister made for her. My four-year-old uses her drawer for her piggy bank, knitting and an Else purse filled with the “special learning cards” she has completed. 

One day early on, I found an entire bunny tea party set up in my oldest daughter’s drawer, which now includes her unicorn necklace, Calico Critter puppies and latest doodles.

My kids love to incorporate items from various sets into their play simultaneously, so at the end of the day we find My Little Ponies set up in a scene using magnifying glasses from the Busytown game and eraser animals having a party in a house made of Legos and 8½” x 11” paper taped together.

When the 5 o’clock sweep comes around, we return all those gazillion pieces to their designated spots. Building sets in the shoe box, electronic toys in the TV cabinet, dress-up clothes in the wicker basket and so on.

In the past, after clean-up time, we’d still be left with random projects—special treasures that my kid wouldn’t want to get mixed up with everyone else’s stuff or scooped up with the recycling. Items that were priceless to one child at that moment, yet meaningless or even annoying to the rest of us, would end up loitering on our dining room table or kitchen windowsill indefinitely.

Now, thanks to something as simple as a catch-all drawer, my evenings in the living room and kitchen are free of kid-litter and, thus, way more peaceful.

We set a couple ground rules to make this system work:

No hiding someone else’s stuff. If another family member has any claims on an item, it belongs in our shared spaces, not your personal drawer. If the drawer can close, I will resist the urge to clean it out. 

No food—and certainly no half-eaten lollipops. 

No judgement. Whatever you choose to store in your drawer in fine with me. Just because I would throw out a crumpled-up paper airplane or the box a toy came in, it doesn’t mean those can’t be deemed special treasures.

If my kids want to be alone, they can climb into their beds. With the addition of the drawers, the few possessions they claim as their own have a home now too.

What space can you carve out for your kids?

Kristin Van de Water
Tinybeans Voices Contributor

Kristin Van de Water is a former journalist and teacher who relies on humor, faith, and her mom crew to get her through the day. Raising four kids in a two-bedroom NYC apartment, Kristin is always on the lookout for life hacks to save time, space, money, and her sanity.

Designing your baby’s nursery can feel both exhilarating and daunting at the same time. While it’s easy to get caught up in picking just the right colors and Pinterest-worthy aesthetics, it’s equally important to create a space that’s functional and can grow with your baby. We’ve come up with nine smart strategies to help you design a room for you and your little one that is fun, functional and even budget-friendly.

Arrange Furniture for Function

Houzz

When designing a nursery, think about what your baby and you will be doing most in the room. Hopefully sleep tops your list! Remember that light and temperature affect sleep, so one of the basics of baby nursery layout is keeping the crib away from windows and heat and air conditioning sources.

Also, you'll be spending plenty of time in the nursery during the first few months, so be sure your glider or rocking chair is in the most convenient spot. For economy of motion, you’ll want your chair near the crib so you don’t have to go far with a crying baby wanting to be fed. Once you’re seated, though, you’re going to want some things within reach. Place your chair near a chest of drawers or place a storage basket or container near or under the chair that's stocked with spit-up cloths, pacifiers, rattles, etc.

Put Up Wall Decals or Removal Wallpaper

Chasing Paper

Wallpaper is totally in right now but you're not sure you want to commit—we get it! An easy and adorable fix is removable wallpaper or wall decals. See Chasing Paper's removable wallpaper in the image above, and check out Tinyme for wall decals. Not only do they add a fun touch to the nursery, they’re perfect for commitmentphobes who love to change up their spaces often.

Keep Shelves Low

JohnKline via Pixabay

Recognizing that your tiny baby will soon be able to crawl and access toys on their own is key in designing a nursery you won't need to re-arrange in six months. As your little one grows, you'll want to encourage them to explore. Unfortunately, tall shelves can look like a mountain that would be fun to climb. A safer alternative is incorporating low shelving and other low-to-the-floor storage containers so, as your baby becomes a toddler, they can easily reach their toys AND learn to put them away!

Put Everything You Need in Reach of the Changing Table

100 Layer Cake-Let

One thing new parents learn quick is that once your baby is on the changing table, squirming and naked, you're stuck! It's vital that everything you need to get the job done is in arm's reach of that table so you don't risk baby falling off.

Choose Transition Furniture

Wayfair

Choosing a crib that transitions to a toddler bed is a surefire way to make sure you'll get more bang for your buck. There are a lot of convertible crib options out there, so you have lots of styles to choose from. Once you find "the one," deck it out with adorable crib sheets that pop. Now there you have it—functional and fun!

Hang Art That Grows With Baby

Serena and Lily

Wall hangings and artwork can really bring your nursery together and give it the special touch that makes it unique. Artwork is one thing that can be swapped out easily, but choosing art that grows with your baby helps keep your budget in check. We love pieces like this pear artwork from Darling Clementine.

Opt For Durable Fabrics

Delta Children

While images of gorgeous all-white nurseries may catch your eye on Instagram, keeping that white glider clean may be more work and time than it's worth. Remember that babies are messy, and the last thing you want is to be stressing over whether the fabric on your new chair is ruined. There are plenty of fabrics that are built to withhold stains. The Clair Slim Nursery Glider Swivel Rocker Chair from Delta Children, above, comes in a durable navy microfiber fabric that is easy to clean.

Conserve Space with Dual-Use items

Wayfair

For such tiny creatures, babies come with an enormous amount of stuff! So no matter what size your baby's room is, conserving space is always a top priority. That's why dual-use items like a dresser/changing table or built-in storage is so helpful. South Shore's Cotton Candy Changing Table, above, features a removable changing table topper, so when your child is done with diapers, they can still use the dresser below.

Get Lighting Right

Amazon

Lighting in a nursery is often overlooked, but it is key to creating a functional room for you and your child. Avoid harsh lighting and control natural light so your baby can sleep better. Also, be sure to put night-light bulbs in your nursery lamp (we love this owl lamp from Lambs & Ivy) so you can check on a sleeping baby or change a diaper without waking them up.

—Aimee Della Bitta

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Ever wondered what it’s like to walk a mile in your kids shoes? While that might be a tight fit, Jan. 25 is officially National Opposite Day, so we’ve come up with a few ways you can do the unexpected. Read on for our ideas you can do with the kids today or any day. 

David J. via Flickr

1. Borrow their lunchbox for your lunch (and give them yours or use a paper lunch bag for their lunch). 

2. Write with crayons all day. Let them color with a ballpoint.

3. Brush with their bubble-gum or apple flavored toothpaste. If they are old enough, give them a pea-sized drop of your minty toothpaste.

4. Eat a PB&J for lunch with carrot sticks or string cheese and be sure your fruit serving is squeezable. (See if you can con them into a fig and goat cheese salad).

5. Swap hats.

6. Eat breakfast for dinner. And while you're at it, pour the milk before the cereal, put the syrup and butter on the plate before the pancakes, etc. Just don't pour the juice before you put out the cup!

7. Attempt to ride their bike or scooter (and let them snap a photo as evidence).

8. Use their mini-backpack as your purse.

9. Swap socks. If their socks are are really tiny, you can put a pair on your thumbs just for laughs.

10. Take them to the grocery store let them “shop” for dinner. Just be prepared to eat Cheez-Its and marshmallows.

StockSnap via Pixabay

11. Let them "read" you a bedtime story. Even kids that aren't reading yet can tell you a story based on pictures in the book.

12. Switch favorite mugs/cups. While you might not want to drink your latte out of a sippy cup, you'll get some laughs when you drink water from one while the kids drink milk from a coffee mug.

13. Use opposite names all day. They can go by Mr. or Mrs. or just call them Mom or Dad.

14. Unless they sleep in a toddler bed (or if you're a petite person) try a bed swap. Or just put their pillow at the opposite end of the bed.

15. Exchange chores. Let them sweep or mop or fold clothes while you make their bed and put away toys. (Wait, you do that anyway? Well, then just sit there and color while they do the housework!)

16. Let them take dozens of pictures of you throughout the day and send them to grandma, aunties and best friends.

17. Head to the playground and have them push you on the swing and cheer you as you slide.

18. Switch clothes: Tie a scarf or necktie on their waist or in their hair while you wear a tutu as a scarf or head to work with a pirate patch on your eye.

Got a silly or sweet picture from National Opposite Day? Share it with us on Instagram with the tag #redtricycle! 

 

—Amber Guetebier

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What to really expect when expecting: baby gear whose instruction manuals are as complicated as your senior year AP calculus class. Good news: Noninoni Kids is changing this head-scratching rite of passage for new parents. Their brand-new crib can be assembled in one minute and requires zero tools (no joke!). Read on to get the scoop on the crib of your dreams.

The Crib: What You Need to Know
The crib assembles in minutes. Literally. Don’t believe us? Check out this video our editor took at the recent ABC Baby & Kids Expo. Each piece fits into place like a puzzle. This means you don’t ever have to break out the toolkit or hardware. The crib has three adjustable mattress positions and when disassembled, it packs flat for easy storage and transport. We love how assembling and disassembling the crib is a total no-brainer, and anyone can do it from mom to nanny to grandpa.

The Choices
You have two options: the Noni Mini-Crib (assembled size is approximately 43 inches long, 28 inches wide and 35 inches high, and prices start at $660) and the Noni Full-Size Crib (assembled size is approximately 57 inches long, 32 inches wide and 35 inches high, and prices start at $750). Both sizes are available in seven baby-safe finishes. We thought the mini-crib is perfect for apartment or city living when space is at a premium and the full-size ideal if you have a bit more space to work with.

Bonus: the full-size crib can convert to a toddler bed with the addition of a toddler rail, which is sold separately for $200.

So, Who Invented This Genius Crib?
A mom, of course! The brains behind Noninoni Kids is Carina Bien-Willner Reichman, an award-winning architect in LA. When her son was born, Carina was alarmed when her husband put the crib together there were six bolts left over. She knew there had to be a better option. So she, along with her father, Ruben Bien-Willner—he’s also an architect and custom furniture maker out of Arizona—dreamed up their crib, which is easy to assemble and disassemble by any caretakers, while still meeting the needs of baby’s sleep demands.

But, What About the Safety Features?
The crib’s safety features are taken just as seriously as its stellar design and asethetic. Here’s the fine print: all cribs are made in the USA using sustainable FSC Certified Baltic Birch plywood. All the finishes comply with 16 CFR 1303 and California Prop 64 Standards. Thorougly tested and approved, the cribs also comply with ASTM F 406 safety standards for cribs. If you want a more detailed report, click here.

Buy online at noninonikids.com

Tell us what you think of the Noninoni Kids crib in the comments below!

— Erin Lem

All photos courtesy of Noninoni Kids

On the hunt for the perfect crib for your baby? From a super splurge to a serious steal, we found the latest and greatest cribs and put them altogether in an easy-to-browse slideshow. Take a look and find one that fits your budget and nursery style. Then cross fingers for many long nights of sound sleep ahead!

Home Is Where the Crib Is

Add a little whimsy and high design to your child's nursery with the Stokke Home Crib. Built to look like a house, this statement piece converts from a crib to a toddler bed to a playhouse or sofa to last through the toddler years and beyond. Want to add a little extra wow? Add on a roof ($105) as pictured here or a striped tent ($140).

Available at Stokke.com, starting at $699.

What crib are you loving for Baby’s nursery? Share your style in a Comment.

–Julie Seguss

Name of Product: Sorelle brand “Prescott” fixed-sided cribs

Retailer/Distributor: Albee Baby, of East Rutherford, N.J.

Manufacturer: Simplicity Inc. (firm is no longer in business)

Hazard: These cribs are re-labeled fixed-sided Simplicity cribs that contain tubular metal mattress-support frames recalled in April 2010. The mattress support frames can bend or detach, causing part of the mattress to drop, creating a space into which an infant or toddler can roll and become wedged, entrapped or fall out of the crib.

Incidents/Injuries: In the April 2010 Simplicity recall, CPSC reported the death of a one-year-old child from Attleboro, Mass. who suffocated when he became entrapped between the crib mattress and the crib frame. In addition, CPSC has received reports of 29 incidents involving the Simplicity cribs where the cribs collapsed due to the metal mattress support frame detaching or bending. These include one child entrapment that did not result in injury and one child who suffered minor cuts when his head struck the broken mattress support bar. CPSC has received one report of a consumer who, in April of 2010, removed the Sorelle Prescott label from the crib and found a Simplicity crib label underneath. (The consumer purchased the crib in July of 2009, prior to the Simplicity mattress support recall.)

Description: These are full-sized fixed-sided cribs sold in an oak finish, as 3-in-1 or 4-in-1 convertible cribs. “Sorelle Furniture” along with the company’s address, the crib’s model number and a manufacturer’s code are printed on a label attached to the headboard or footboard.

Sold at: This recall is limited to Sorelle “Prescott” cribs sold online by AlbeeBaby.com between July 2009 and October 2009 for between $180 and $210.

Remedy: Consumers should immediately stop using the recalled cribs and contact Albee Baby for a replacement crib, store credit or refund. C&T International/Albee Baby is attempting to directly contact known consumers who purchased the recalled crib online from July 2009 through October 2009. In the meantime, find an alternate, age appropriate, safe sleeping environment for the child, such as a bassinet, play yard or toddler bed.

Consumer Contact: For additional information, contact Albee Baby toll-free at (877) 692-5233 between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. ET Monday through Friday or visit the firm’s website at http://www.albeebaby.com