Old Safety Pins

Way way back when … when babies and toddlers wore cloth nappies (diapers to you in the north western hemisphere) safety pins were common.

The strong, well-made ones with the slide down safety caps ruled. Women regularly wore them pinned to their aprons while they bathed their babies.

Sometimes there was a cry through the house, where are the safety pins? For years and years, millions of nappies were safely safety-pinned around all the babies who wore nappies.

Yes, of course there were accidents, babies getting pricked. But not as often as disposable nappy manufacturers shouted about. There was a technique that you were taught in prenatal classes. You only stabbed your own fingers a few times until you learned.

Now we don’t have those particular accidents. But can you imagine the billions by now of disposable but not degradable diapers in landfills and oceans everywhere? And so there’ve been other, also frightening accidents.

Whales and other marine animals choking on soiled nappies thrown overboard a boat. Soiled nappies choking the gutters and causing floods.

Soiled nappies flushed down toilets, nappies dumped by the side of roads and wildlife trying to eat them. At least when my mother, who out of sheer frustration had to dump a full nappy in a train station’s rubbish bin, that nappy was made of biodegradable cotton.

I remember her mourning the necessity and the loss, sixty-eight years ago. The railway station in Genoa, Italy. The family, including the now four month old twins, were on their way back to Netherland after a year in Indonesia.

That up there is my collection of old safety pins. At least three are forty years old from the time when it was my turn to pin nappies on a baby. These pins still going strong. I wouldn’t like to be without them.

This little repair, for instance, does anybody ever replace tired elastic in jeans, pyjamas, etc? And how, if not with the help of safety pins?

5 thoughts on “Old Safety Pins

  1. I love this ode to safety pins. In my youth I was a big anti-tampon activist, though I’ve never been a parent of a human baby I’ve never had to make diapering/nappie decisions for a baby… I spent a lot of time thinking and teaching about reusable cloth menstrual pads. Safety pins were a criitcal part of that until we realized we could be using sew-in snaps, which had less risk of poking a person in an area that should be protected.
    But then your last line — I love replacing my elastic waistbands and inserting drawstrings, and I rely on my bodkin for that! My partner’s hoodie drawstrings come out alllll the time and I have them inserted again in an instant. The bodkin is a single-use item, not like the universally useful safety pin — but it is incredible at its one job.

    Thanks for sharing your nappy story, I bet she was so sad to leave a precious nappy behind. But…not a lot of other options!

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      1. I laughed then, for a minute I thought I had the bodkin on the left. Looked very familiar. But I don’t though the one I have at first glance looks the same, but lacks the little slide thing. Lol, I never knew something like that existed and have been doing work needing bodkins for about 60 years.

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