Special Crib Features
With so many styles and options available on baby cribs today, purchasing the perfect baby crib can be a overwhelming. First of all, determine your price range and decide which baby crib features are most important to you, and of course, which design will be a best fit in the baby nursery.
We made a list of some important baby crib features to get you started on your quest and help you narrow things down a bit.
Safety Standards
Any new baby crib must meet a minimum government safety standards requirements. Lets assume that you purchased a new crib, and if you assemble it to the manufacturer’s instructions and use the crib properly, even the least expensive cribs will be safe for baby. A safe crib should have a firm, tight-fitting mattress, no missing/broken hardware or slats and no cutouts in the head- or foot-boards. Slats should be no more than 2 3/8″ apart (the width of a soda can). Corner posts should not be higher than 1/16″. Assuming all that, anything can’t go wrong – your baby is safe here!
Drop sides
Drop sides are important, and the crib feature you might use most often. Baby cribs come with fixed, single-drop or double-drop sides. Fixed sides will be fine for parents who are tall or if the crib will only be used occasionally. Most parents will want at least one side to drop, so the baby can be lifted in and out with ease. Baby cribs with double drop sides might be nice if the nursery is big enough, so the crib isn’t against a wall, but in the center of the room ( A mattress can be raised to facilitate lifting and droping the baby back and forth).
- Knee Push – Leaning your knee against the crib side lowers the side. Quiet and simple, this may be the most common type today.
- Foot Bar – You balance on one foot and push a lever to drop the crib sides. This type is less common today.
- Double Trigger – You use both hands to squeeze triggers that release the crib side. Two-handed operation isn’t easy while holding baby.
- Fold-Down – Convenient and easy to use. Be sure the fold is high enough to keep baby from climbing out of the crib.
Caster Wheels
Wheels are always a very useful feature in almost anything. Check the casters to make sure they aren’t flimsy, because you’ll be moving the crib to vacuum under it, change sheets or fetch toys. If you aren’t sure if you’ll need them, leave them off the crib but keep them nearby. You’ll probably want them on the crib by the time the baby is 3 or 4 months old. If you fall in love with a crib that doesn’t have wheels already installed, you can buy furniture caster wheels at the hardware store and install them yourself.
Crib Mattress Height and Support
Adjustable mattress height is available on all but the most inexpensive cribs. It allows the mattress to be higher so you can gently lay down a sleeping newborn, then lowered for babies who can pull up. At least two mattress heights is nice, three is even better. Check out the way the mattress is held up. Some cheaper cribs use vinyl straps that could wear out and break. Baby cribs with metal bars are a better choice. The best choice is a metal spring system to support the mattress.
Convertible Baby Cribs
Convertible baby cribs are attractive to many buyers, but the added expense may not be worth it to some parents. Some baby cribs are convertible to toddler beds, others to full-size adult beds. Most cribs require an extra kit to be fully convertible; ask about the cost before you make your final decision on convertible baby cribs. Also ask yourself whether you’ll actually convert the crib or whether you’ll reuse the crib for siblings and buy a separate toddler bed.
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