My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

Feminism: Sex & gender discussions

Boy coloured nursing cover.

31 replies

feministefatale · 01/02/2013 02:21

Anyone looking to get rid of a boy-coloured nursing cover? I have a purple one, but I think he'd appreciate something more neutral. ;)

Saw this for sale locally. What the fuck, surely even if you worry about this this sort of thing you can see that a nursing cover is an accessory for you? you wear it And that a baby doesn't care about what color you are wearing anyway?

OP posts:
Report
ripsishere · 01/02/2013 02:24

Ah, that's what a boy color isn't. How peculiar.
I don't often come into the area, but saw the thread title in Last 15 minutes and couldn't resist.
Ridiculous to imagine a baby having an opinion, let alone appreciate it. And WTAF is the ;) all about?

Report
feministefatale · 01/02/2013 03:02

Apparently babies worry about these things... might put him off his milk wearing a purple cover!

OP posts:
Report
KatAndKit · 01/02/2013 10:08

He would catch Teh Gay off a girly nursing cover surely?

I'm sure he would probably prefer to eat without a big sheet thing draped over his head regardless of colour.

Report
Kveta · 01/02/2013 11:42

I have seen similar on local selling pages. Like bouncy chairs that are blue or green being deemed inappropriate for a baby girl. And when I was looking for a second hand bumbo for DD, everyone I mentioned it to (in the hope they had one to get rid of!) said 'you'll be wanting a pink one then'. Eh, no, she was 16 weeks old ffs.

I get an awful lot of comments at playgroup if I dress her in anything other than pink too, it is pathetic and in no way influences my decision to dress her in DS's hand-me-downs on playgroup days at all

Report
LRDtheFeministDragon · 01/02/2013 11:49

How weird.

Is anyone else visualizing a 'boy-coloured' nursing cover as some kind of bizarre skintone cammo gear, so that you'd appear to have a lump of flesh growing oddly out of your boob?

Just me?

I'll get me coat.

Report
chipmonkey · 01/02/2013 12:51

Oh the idea of a flesh coloured one, yuck!

The idea of nursing covers at all annoys me slightly as I don't think women should feel that they have to cover up when feeding. I did get one for expressing in the car and picked one that looked like a shawl and went with my clothes.

I remember one of my colleagues talking me out of buying a pink changing bag too because ds4 was a boy. I thought given that it was me carrying the thing, it shouldn't matter but then thought that people might think that I had it in pink because I wanted a girl and that that wouldn't be fair to ds4. So I got it in red and later saw the pink one and was annoyed with myself as it was actually nicer.

Which really just goes to show that I spend far too much time thinking about what other people are thinking when they're probably not actually all that bothered!

Report
badguider · 01/02/2013 12:55

'boy coloured' is ridiculous - in fact made me wonder if the person's DH was going to be nursing Shock

but nursing covers in general are surely great for feeding outdoors - do your boobs not get cold otherwise?

Report
Startail · 01/02/2013 12:56

DD had blue summer dungarees.

She was called a boy every time she wore them.

They were covered in batik flowers.

Honestly, does blue really equal boy that strongly.

Report
Startail · 01/02/2013 13:00

As for nursing covers, I've never even seen one.

I just fed in a loose Tshirt.
Out doors you just wear a zip fronted fleece.
On country walks you just snuggle baby in the pram blanket and your fleece round the edges,

Report
feministefatale · 01/02/2013 14:55

I don't really see the point of them, and I hate that women feel they need them, but can't judge any one for using one if they feel more comfortable for having one.

Absolutely judge needing a boy coloured one though Grin

poor little things penis could fall off in a purple one, don't you know

OP posts:
Report
badguider · 01/02/2013 15:10

The only time i've seen one in real life was in a bit of rain/sleet in yellowstone NP while waiting for a geyser to go off so it seemed like a good idea to me... wouldn't wear one indoors though.

Report
C4ro · 01/02/2013 15:13

Pfft!
My DD hated being tucked under anything, it never occurred to me she might just have been raising an objection to the colour/ lack of sparkly pink glitter.

Report
Kveta · 01/02/2013 15:15

at the 'pink' playgroup we go to, I often see mums using nursing covers - each to their own, I guess. but needing a 'boy-coloured' one is absurd, and should be judged, and judged hard!

Report
Booyhoo · 01/02/2013 15:18

are boys different colours than girls then? Confused

i dont understand people like that.

Report
BinarySolo · 01/02/2013 15:38

At the risk of sounding thick, what's a nursing cover?

My ds has a bright pink my little pony and a piglet cuddly toy that he loves. Wouldn't dream of making him play with just boy coloured stuff.

Report
duchesse · 01/02/2013 15:43

"What colour is a boy?" was my immediate thought.

Report
tethersend · 01/02/2013 15:46

How silly.

She could just make it a boy cover by simply getting a marker pen and drawing massive willies all over it. Hey presto! Problem solved.

Report
feministefatale · 01/02/2013 16:14

she'd have to first erase all the vulvas already drawn on it though. It could ruin the effect

OP posts:
Report
5madthings · 01/02/2013 16:18

Oh god its madness.

I have a ring sling that was given to me, I used it lots for my five, eldest four are boys. The amount if comments I got asthge sling was....purple... So a 'girl' colour. Ds4 looked particularly fetching in the sling in his purple the dyed baby grows! I dyed loads myself, red, green, blue, orange, purple all bright cheerful col ours but I did get comments on how they shouldn't wear the purple or the red ones as they are girls colours?!!

Report
SolomanDaisy · 01/02/2013 16:23

I didn't realise purple was a girl's colour until I dressed DS in it. Mind you, people still mistake him for a girl even when he is wearing navy blue. There must be a specific shade of boy blue that alerts everyone.

Report
WilsonFrickett · 01/02/2013 16:47

But what colour is boy coloured? Doesn't it depend on the colour of your boy?

Report
WilsonFrickett · 01/02/2013 16:47

YY tethers what in my school was called an (ahem) 'cock an' baws set'.

Report

Don’t want to miss threads like this?

Weekly

Sign up to our weekly round up and get all the best threads sent straight to your inbox!

Log in to update your newsletter preferences.

You've subscribed!

SaraBellumHertz · 01/02/2013 16:53

It's interesting though the point that it is the mothers accessory and not the baby's. I wear a lot of black and grey and navy but somehow that just feels wrong for a nursing cover (not that I ever used one).

Report
SaraBellumHertz · 01/02/2013 16:54
Report
feministefatale · 01/02/2013 17:07

I see it as the mother trying to give herself some privacy, if you never used a cover you may not have needed privacy so see a cover as giving the baby in quiet?

I saw the pram as my accessory, I am pushing the bloody thing (dh's too but he works so more mine) and I really wanted a hot pink bugaboo (so sue me)... IN the end I got a sand coloured one because it was on Ebay.. but I never saw it as needing to "match" the dc. Same with car seats, they match our car... not the kids.

OP posts:
Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.