7 Natural Baby Care Recipes

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All natural homemade baby skin care recipes
Wellness Mama » Blog » Motherhood » 7 Natural Baby Care Recipes

I love using natural products for all of my personal care, cleaning and household needs, but if you’re not ready to jump on the DIY deodorant and toothpaste bandwagon just yet, at least consider using all natural products on your kids!

Most kids are exposed to a scary number of chemicals on a daily basis, and even babies are born with chemicals in their umbilical blood. Most baby products and shampoos contain chemicals and many are not actually safe for baby. For example, many baby shampoos (including J&J) have some of the worst chemical ratings and baby oil is just liquid petroleum oil with some added (artificial) fragrances.

A baby or child’s perfectly soft skin absorbs almost anything put on it, so natural options are really important! There are a few companies who make natural baby care options, but the cheapest, easiest and most natural way is just to make your own. Actually, you can just use pure coconut oil for everything from cleaning to moisturizing to treating diaper rash, but if you’d prefer a little variation, check out these recipes!

These are the recipes I use on my own kids and give to friends when they have babies.

Natural Diaper Cream-Cloth Diaper Safe!

UPDATE: I’ve created an updated version of this diaper cream that is even more effective and you can find the recipe here.

We started cloth diapering with our third child and I will never go back! Not only is it much cheaper, but it is more natural and much easier than I expected after hearing horror stories from my mother-in-law about the old-school cloth diapers. Thanks to cloth diapers and better nutrition my babies very rarely get diaper rash, but for the occasional time when a baby poops during the night and doesn’t wake up until morning or gets a rash while in the car seat on a trip, it can be a little tougher with cloth diapers.

Commercial diaper cream should never be used with cloth diapers since the fish oil in it will leave a fishy smell no matter how much you wash the diapers. It will also void any warranty on the cloth diapers. After much research and some trial and error, I finally created a diaper cream that is cloth diaper safe and that works as well as the medicated versions.

It can be used directly with cloth diapers if you don’t mind stripping the diapers after using them, but I prefer just to line the diaper with a piece of an old t-shirt when I’m using diaper cream to avoid the extra laundry hassle.

Diaper Cream Ingredients

How to Make Natural Diaper Cream

Heat a couple inches of water over medium high heat in a double boiler or small sauce pan. Melt the coconut oil in a glass bowl or double boiler top above the boiling water. Add the calendula and chamomile flowers and keep the heat going on low/medium for at least an hour or until coconut oil has started to turn yellow and smells of chamomile and calendula. Make sure to check the water level often and make sure it hasn’t gotten too hot or evaporated off.

Carefully strain the flowers out, reserving as much of the coconut oil as possible. A fine mesh metal strainer is best for this, or a cheesecloth will work, though you’ll lose more of the coconut oil. Make sure all visible pieces of the flower have been removed.

Using a small immersion blender or even a fork to mash, mix the infused coconut oil with the shea butter and arrowroot or zinc oxide if using until it forms a thick paste. I actually have a small food processor I use for this mixture (and not for food) and when mixed in a food processor it makes an airy, velvety cream.

Store in a small glass jar and apply as needed. Use a liner with cloth diapers. This is much more concentrated and effective than store-bought versions and a little goes a really long way! It can also be used for adult yeast infections or for  healing of the perineum postpartum.

Why These Ingredients?

I chose each of these ingredients for a specific purpose. Coconut oil is very effective on its own for treating rash, as it is anti-fungal and very soothing to skin.

Calendula has antibacterial properties and speeds skin healing while Chamomile has anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, anti-inflammatory and anti-parasitic properties and is especially helpful for diaper rashes.

Shea Butter, besides making the skin incredibly soft, has anti-fungal and yeast-killing properties when raw. It is high in Vitamins A and E and helps promote collagen production in the skin. It is naturally anti-inflammatory and has an SPF of 6. It also helps prevent and get rid of stretch marks.

homemade natural baby oil recipe

Vitamin Rich Baby Oil

Regular baby oil is petroleum based and packed with artificial fragrances! You can always use plain coconut oil, but making an infused oil adds some vitamins and speeds skin healing. This is my favorite:

Baby Oil Ingredients

Baby Oil Instructions

There are two ways to make this recipe.

Fast way: You can infuse over heat like in the recipe above: “Heat a couple inches of water over medium high heat in a double boiler or small sauce pan. Melt the oil in a glass bowl or double boiler top above the boiling water. Add the calendula and chamomile flowers and keep the heat going on low/medium for at least an hour or until oil has started to turn yellow and smells of chamomile and calendula. Make sure to check the water level often and make sure it hasn’t gotten too hot or evaporated off.” and then just strain the flowers out and use as regular baby oil.

Slower but more concentrated way: Put the calendula and chamomile in a glass jar and pour the oil over it. Put a tight-fitting lid on. Keep in a cool, dark place and shake daily for 6-8 weeks to make a gorgeous light-orange oil that is great for baby or adult skin. It is soothing on eczema or skin irritation and calming to baby.

homemade all natural baby powder recipe

Soothing Baby Powder

Some regular baby powder contain talc, which is closely related to asbestos and has been linked to various cancers. Please don’t put it on your baby’s tender tushie! There are natural alternatives that are incredibly easy to make and work better without the  side of cancer.

Here’s the recipe.

Homemade Baby Wipes

We make our own baby wipes and I use the same natural formula for cloth wipes or to make disposable wipes. They are not only more natural and environmentally friendly… they are cheaper too! 🙂

Here’s the recipe.

Super Smooth Baby Lotion and Lotion Bars

I’ve used my basic homemade lotion recipe on all of our kids and it is gentle enough for baby skin. Here’s the basic recipe.

I also recently discovered that homemade lotion bars are an even better option and are very protective on baby’s skin but still allow it to breathe. You can add chamomile or calendula to the oils if you want, but the basic lotion bars work excellent, especially on babies with sensitive skin or eczema. They are even easier to make, last longer and are fun for kids to use too. They have a natural SPF of about 7.

You can also just use plain coconut oil… tired of me saying that yet?

Baby Shampoo or Wash

Babies don’t actually need soaps or shampoos for the most part. They have naturally protective oils in their skin that are better not washed off.

If you do need a lathery soap to feel like baby is clean, I’d suggest Dr. Bronner’s sensitive skin liquid castile soap for both soap and shampoo. On my daughter (11 months) I just use natural microfiber cloths to clean off the food, dirt, etc. without stripping all of her natural oils. I also use them to wash her hair. Then, I just use coconut oil or baby oil (above) when needed, which isn’t often.

Natural Teething/Pain Relief

I don’t use children’s Tylenol, children’s Motrin or any other children’s version of a pharmaceutical on my kids. The poor things must navigate the waters of teething without the help of medicine, but I do use natural means to help ease the pain when I can.

Chamomile tincture is by far my most used tincture with babies and kids. I use it mostly externally on babies to sooth colic or teething and internally for older kids who have trouble sleeping or who have a head or stomach ache. Here’s the tincture recipe. I dilute or let the alcohol evaporate when using on babies or children.

Note: if you’re looking for more natural solutions for surviving teething, check out this post!

Do you make your own baby products? Use natural ones? What is your best advice for keeping toxins away from baby? Share the wisdom below!

These are natural baby care recipes including diaper cream (cloth diaper safe), baby oil, baby powder, soap, lotion, and wipes with calendula and chamomile.

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

313 responses to “7 Natural Baby Care Recipes”

  1. Rachel Avatar

    Hi there,

    Thanks for all the great recipes. I have made your nappy cream, lotion bars, lip chap, and baby oil. All are a great success! However, I am failing to grind up the petals for the baby powder. I have tried a coffee grinder and a thermomix (which has never failed any other challenge I’ve set for it).

    Any suggestions would be gratefully received.

  2. Stacy Shular Avatar
    Stacy Shular

    My 5 year old daughter has horrible eczema. I just got all the stuff from Rose Mountain Herbs to make her the lotion bars. My 3 month old son has a shiny, almost wet looking, rash. It’s under his knees, between his elbows, armpits, and behind his ears. The Pediatrician, of course, wrote us a prescription for steroids. After my daughter being on them for so long, I refuse to give my kids steroid creams. What do you suggest I use on my 3 month old son? It looks so tender and I’m afraid it’s hurting him. Thank you!

    1. sandra Avatar

      My son got terrible eczema and I collected large buckets of water from the beach and gently warmed it to body temp (beach was too cold to swim in at the time) in a large pot on the stove and bathed him in it and eczema completely disappeared after about a week. So glad I managed to avoid the nasty steroid cream the doctor wanted me to use.

  3. Nichi Avatar

    My sister and I are about to make a bunch of these recipes this weekend as we prepare for my babe to be born. MRH only has calendula powder in stock ( we’re local). Can we use that in the diaper cream recipe? Please say yes!!

      1. Nichi Avatar

        Wonderful!!! Thank you! I can’t wait to make all our Wellness Mama goodies :). Little dude will love them!

  4. caitlyn collins Avatar
    caitlyn collins

    I’m looking into gathering the ingredients for your diaper rash cream listed above and had a question or two.

    1. Can the cream be stored in the refridgerator to prolong its shelf life?
    2. Are you able to sub. chamomile&calendula extract for the flowers?

  5. Rachel Avatar

    Hi there, just made this nappy cream for the first time today after spending a week excitedly gathering the ingredients (not the simplest task in Ireland, it took a good few shops!). I followed the instructions to a T however the outcome isn’t what I expected… Very liquidy, as stated in several other comments above. The coconut oil was solid at room temp, and i melted it in the double boiler as per the instructions. I added an extra tsp of arrowroot to thicket but it made no difference and I didn’t want to add anything more to alter it. It certainly didn’t make a “thick paste” nor did it create a “velvety thick cream”!! 😀 unless that’s after it cools? ***Edit*** it’s been cooling at room temp for a couple of hours and is still completely liquid. Does it require refridgeration to thicken? It doesn’t imply this in the instructions! I’m dying to make more of your recipes but the ingredients are quite expensive here (9 euro for 1/2 cup of shea butter!) so I just don’t want to risk this happening agian :-S Please please let me know what else I can do!

    Thank you!
    Rachel

  6. Tammy Avatar

    hello i really want to make my own baby lotion for my son who is 10 months now. he has extremely dry skin. i am confused on the calendula and chamomile what form should i buy it oil, flower, or powder based. please i need to know asap. my baby boy needs relief. thanks

  7. Janelle Avatar
    Janelle

    Hello! I just wanted to say thanks for your collection of recipes here! I am due soon with baby #7 and have never made my own products before. I have had so much fun making these and can’t wait to use them. I have fallen in love with chamomile in the process! Tea from the whole flowers versus the bagged stuff you buy isn’t comparable… the diaper rash cream turned out so lovely – both texture and smell! – I can’t seem to stay out of it! I put it on just to smell it! I have tincture and baby oil in the making, next thing I want to try is a lotion bar. What would you think of adding a vanilla bean in with cham. and calendula while infusing into the coconut oil? I love vanilla in anything and would love to see the specks in the finished lotion bar. Another alternative I’m contemplating is putting dried rose hips in the oil to infuse also. I have whole or cut/sifted/seedless. Any recommendations or thoughts?
    I also made your deodorant recipe and we LOVE it. My husband immediately put it to the test and it came through with flying colors. It works so well, he wondered if I was sure it wasn’t clogging his pores or something?! 🙂
    Again, thanks for a lovely collection! – Janelle

  8. gabriella k Avatar
    gabriella k

    Hi, not sure if someone has asked this already but how long would it be until these expire? If you could address each one and how long it lasts that would be great!

  9. Sharvey Avatar

    I am allergic to coconut so I cant use it on my babies. What is a good diaper cream recipe without coconut oil?

  10. Rosa Avatar

    I tried to make the diaper rash ointment but it did not thicken. What did I do wrong?

  11. Rebecca C Avatar
    Rebecca C

    I found this recipe for the diaper rash cream. My daughter gets these horrible cystic looking bumps on her whole diaper area. They get really inflamed and sometimes even form heads. Anywho… I made the recipe exactly as stated except I didn’t have any chamomile. I used yarrow instead of chamomile. Once it was all done, it smelled pretty good. I used it on her bottom and put her to bed, the next morning was a huge improvement! Over night the areas that were raised up had smoothed back down and the red was down to a light pink. It was awesome! I highly recommend. It also helped my son who was a little red. The redness was gone in the morning. Awesome! Thanks!

  12. sherry Avatar

    Hello wellness mama
    I hope this post isn’t too old for me to ask a question regarding the nappy cream. I made this today according to the instructions but it turned out very watery so I’m not sure what I did wrong. Do I need to let the mixture set before I mix it? I tried adding more arrowroot powder and shea butter to thicken it but it didn’t make much of a difference and now I’m worried I’ve ruined the batch by using more of the arrowroot powder and shea butter than what the recipe called for.
    Would it still be okay to use as is if it sets or should I start again with a fresh batch?Thank you for your help 🙂

  13. Anna Avatar

    Hello! I was wondering if grape seed oil would work for the baby oil recipe? I’d like to make some and I have plenty of that particular oil on hand… Thank you so much for this post, by the way; I use the diaper cream and wipe solution and lotion for my 8 month old daughter. She has incredibly sensitive/dry skin… we actually bathe her with coconut oil, ha! The diaper cream sans zinc also works great on her chin when it gets chapped from drooling, and we occasionally use the wipe solution (we keep a spray bottle of it in the diaper bag and at the changing table for flannel wipes) as a non-toxic hand sanitizer! 🙂

  14. Ashlee Avatar

    I am SO grateful to have found out. I am so excited to read through all of your natural posts! I just found out that J&J uses formaldehyde in their BABY shampoo and I am mortified. I feel like the worst mom in the world for trusting a ahem, “trusted” brand without doing research. Learning how to make all of our usual products we buy in stores is on my to do list and at the top of it! I can’t wait to start testing out all of your recipes!

  15. Jessica Ann Kowalke Avatar
    Jessica Ann Kowalke

    how long do the diaper rash cream and baby powder last? I’m 4 months along and am wondering how soon I can make these so they are ready when baby arrives.

    1. Rebecca C Avatar
      Rebecca C

      It should last for ages, as long as it doesn’t get contaminated with anything, and you really remove every last particle of herbs. If you don’t, the herb particles might start to decay at some point, is my best guess. I used a piece of flour sack cloth to strain mine through.

  16. Ana Avatar

    These are all great natural alternatives to store bought products, but none of these products are really necessary. I have two kids aged 7 and 2.5 and I’ve never bought or used baby oil or talc powder in my life. Before they turned 1, all I used on them was some mild soap (and only then on their butts when they pooped) and a bit of diaper cream. The rest of them I washed with nothing but water. I never used baby wipes on them either except in dire emergencies when outside. When changing diapers, if they pooped, I put their butts under a stream of water and washed them with a bit of soap, and if they just peed, I used just water. After they turned 1 they started getting around more and getting dirtier, so I started using more soap. And that’s it. I never used any kind of cream, lotion or anything else and both have always had healthy and perfect skin. I wish I’ve read about your teething relief recipe sooner, though, because that’s something I would have used had I known about it!

  17. Nadia Patterson Avatar
    Nadia Patterson

    In making the baby oil and lotion, can I use chamomile infused oil and calendula infused oil instead of the flowers?

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