Posts Tagged ‘eco-friendly diapers’

FuzziBunz “Where in the World is the FuzziCAM?” Campaign – Second Stop Illinois

Thursday, December 1st, 2011

The FuzziCam has left Texas and has made it’s way to Illinois.

Meet Hannah Goff from O’Fallon, IL – a beautiful military wife and SAHM who loves cloth diapering!

Our FuzziCAM is hitting the road and visiting cloth diapering moms (and dads) across the country.  We’re on a journey to meet 50 cloth diapering families.

If you are interested in representing your state, email us at press@fuzzibunz.com.



FuzziBunz Launches “Where in the World is the FuzziCAM?” Campaign – First Stop Texas!

Monday, November 7th, 2011

Just like Matt Lauer set-off today on his annual travel adventure, FuzziBunz is excited to announce we are taking our own trip around the globe (well, maybe just a tour of the U.S. first) with our “Where in the World is the FuzziCAM?” campaign.

Our FuzziCAM is hitting the road and visiting cloth diapering moms (and dads) across the country.  We’re on a journey to meet 50 cloth diapering families.

Here’s how it works:

- A mom will receive the FuzziCAM and shoot footage of her home, city and family.

- She’ll also be asked to conduct a short Q&A session so we can really get to know each mom in-depth.

- When she’s done, the camera moves on to the next state and so on.

Our goal is to get a mom or dad from all 50 States!

We are working on a special feature on our website to track the location of the camera, so stay tuned for that.  In the meantime, we’ll update the FuzziBunz Facebook page with our progress.

If you are interested in representing your state, email us at press@fuzzibunz.com.

And now we’d like to introduce you to our first mom -  Celeste Seitz-Davis from Frisco, Texas!

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FuzziBunz – A Diaper Bag Must-Have for NBC Philadelphia’s The 10! Show

Friday, November 4th, 2011

Leah Zerbe from Rodale.com talks to NBC Philadelphia’s The 10! Show about eco-friendly, must-haves for your diaper bag.  Of course, she suggests you bring along FuzziBunz cloth diapers!

View more videos at: http://nbcphiladelphia.com.



Cloth Diapering Unwrapped: My Earth Day Resolutions

Tuesday, April 26th, 2011

eco-friendly cloth diapering

Be sure to make your Earth Day resolutions this year - and keep 'em too!

I’ve admitted before and I’ll say it again: I don’t pretend to be the greenest mom on the block. That said, we do try to live as environmentally-conscious as we can, and we’ve made it a goal to raise our kids that way. But we know there is always more we can do.

I’ve been thinking a lot this week about Earth Day, what it means and how we could honor it in the midst of everything else happening in our lives.  The day came and went.

Then it hit me: Earth Day doesn’t (and shouldn’t) have to be about that one day and what we do on that one day.  To those already trending green, it should simply be a reminder, a fresh start in the commitment to living consciously and respecting our earth.  So instead of trying to do something special just on Earth Day, I decided to make a few Earth Day resolutions (like New Year’s resolutions, except I am really going to try to keep these ones – ha!). I consider these small changes and goals to work on all year long.

I loved how cloth diaper advocate, Kelly Wels, said it on her blog last week: cloth diapering made her an eco-conscious mom.  I think that’s true for a lot of us.

While my Earth Day resolutions aren’t anything groundbreaking, I am resolving to make a few simple changes that I can reasonably fit into my life, including:

Compost. I have a composter in my garage that I have yet to set up.  This one won’t be hard, I just need to do it.

Join a CSA. My equally-green friend in a neighboring town recently mentioned there wasn’t a Community Supported Agriculture program available in our area, so she’s working on bringing one here.  I’m resolving to help her do that, sign on myself and encourage our friends and neighbors to buy shares.  I think eating locally-grown, in-season veggies can not only reduce the carbon footprint by not trucking our food across the country, but also it will be a healthier choice for us.

Eliminate paper napkins and reduce paper towels by half. I honestly do not use that many paper towels.  We dry hands and dishes with kitchen towels and I use cloth washcloths for cleaning the countertop, washing dishes, cleaning up spilled juice and spit-up, dusting and everyday floor washing.  However, I do clean with paper towels.  A lot.  So I think there can be some reduction there – my goal is to reduce paper towels by half, even for cleaning.  I’m embarrassed to admit that we use paper napkins almost every day.  I hope to switch over to fun, colorful cloth napkins and eliminate the paper ones completely.

Run at least one errand on foot per week (weather permitting). Our town isn’t conducive to doing everything on foot (we just don’t have everything nearby) and it gets cold in the winter, so I am not going to over-promise on this one, but I can definitely do more walking – to the grocery store, the post office, even taking my son to school.  It’ll reduce our footprint…and hopefully my waistline!

Reduce our trash-to-curb. We’re already decent in this area and the composting and paper product elimination will help, but I think we can do better.  Our family of four puts out about one half-full garbage can each week, but I think our recycling can improve and I’d love to get down to only one bag of trash each week.

There you have it.  My environmental goals, my Earth Day resolutions out there for all to see.  I know that by cloth diapering, we’re all already taking a huge step (I often think about how much bigger our trash output would be if we were not using cloth), but taking a few more small steps could really make a difference and I will update you on our progress.

What Earth Day resolutions did you make? If you haven’t made them yet, it’s not too late to do so!

Sarah is a mom of two and blogs about her adventures in motherhood, cloth diapering and everything in between.  Catch her “Cloth Diapering Unwrapped” series on the FuzziBunz blog every Tuesday. Learn more about Sarah here.



Cloth Diapering Unwrapped: A Mountain of Trash

Tuesday, April 19th, 2011

Landfills filled with disposable diapers

A landfill provides a great teachable moment for your child to learn about being a good steward of our world

“Mama, LOOOK at that mountain!!” exclaimed my astute almost three-year-old from the back seat on a five-hour road trip a couple weekends ago.  My husband and I exchanged glances of “should we get into it now?” and then, because we had five hours…we (I) pounced on the teachable moment.  His “mountain” was a landfill.

I explained in my mom voice, “Actually, Punkin, do you know what that mountain is made of?  It’s made of garbage, trash. The kind we put out for the garbage truck to pick up. Tons and tons of it.  You know when the garbage truck comes to our house on Tuesdays it takes away our trash?  Well it brings it to a place like this.  It’s called a landfill.”

My son seemed to get it, so I continued, “That mountain is actually trash piled up on trash and more trash from years and years of people throwing all their old stuff away.  Our garbage has to go somewhere, so we put it in places like these.  Over that grassy hill, you would see lots and lots of garbage bags and stinky diapers and old vegetables. Isn’t that gross?”

I’m not sure what he was picturing from my simple description, but he answered with a dutiful, “Yeah Mommy. Gross!!”  Ok, I guess that’s enough for one lesson on the environment…landfills are, as my son simply put it, gross!

I don’t know the right way to teach my kids about being eco-conscious about the environment, but I do know that my husband and I want conservation and environmental friendliness to be an everyday, ingrained part of their lives as they grow up, like making their bed, taking a bath or going to school.  I want it to be something they just DO, something they think about, something they believe in.  And I’m hoping that because it’s so mainstream now, they won’t be in the minority when they get to school.  I hoping that green will always be cool.

Our little interaction got me thinking about the lessons I teach my kids.  That’s why today, I’m making a promise to myself to always take the opportunities to teach my kids to be green – both through words and actions (cloth diapering is a great example!).  It’s easy to let these moments pass without explanations; I call it simplifying the hassle.  But life lessons aren’t easy to explain in one session.. so as we approach Earth Day 2011, I commit to letting my son help with the recycling, talking more about the ways we can protect our planet and not shying away from teachable moments where I can teach him to be a good steward of our planet.

Happy Earth Day everyone!

PS – To have your very own teachable moment, bring your baby to our Earth Day celebrations at a Great Cloth Diaper Change event near you!

Sarah is a mom of two and blogs about her adventures in motherhood, cloth diapering and everything in between.  Catch her “Cloth Diapering Unwrapped” series on the FuzziBunz blog every Tuesday. Learn more about Sarah here.



FuzziBunz® Unveils New Cloth Diaper to Raise Awareness for Earth Day. FuzziBunz Host to “The Cloth Diaper Change” Site in New Orleans

Monday, April 11th, 2011

Lafayette, Louisiana (April 11, 2011)FuzziBunz® cloth diapers is honoring Mother Earth by launching a new limited edition Earth Day 2011 diaper.  The fashionable cloth diapers sport a picture of planet Earth and say “Earth Day Everyday!”.

“I think most moms take great pride in the fact that they cloth diaper. We not only want moms to feel good about cloth diapering, but also we want cloth diapering to be fun,” says Tereson Dupuy, the founder and CEO of FuzziBunz® and Mother of the Modern Cloth Diaper. “What’s great about the new FuzziBunz® Earth Day limited edition diaper is that it can serve as a teachable moment between a parent and child, sparking some of the first conversations a baby or toddler will have with their parents about their part in protecting our planet.”

Each FuzziBunz® cloth diaper retails for $21.95. To find an authorized FuzziBunz® retailer near you, please visit the “Where to Buy FuzziBunz®” page on FuzziBunz.com.

FuzziBunz and “The Great Cloth Diaper Change” National Event

Also, to raise awareness for the cloth diaper industry, FuzziBunz is proud to announce its support for “The Great Cloth Diaper Change” event, taking place on April 23, 2011 at 11:00 am CDT. FuzziBunz is host to the New Orleans “change” site and is one of more than 400 sites that will be participating in this momentous event that aims to break the Guinness World Record for most diapers changed at the same time – of course all the diapers changed will be cloth diapers!

More details about the event can be found on the FuzziBunz blog.

About FuzziBunz®

The patented FuzziBunz® cloth diapers are a modern, convenient and sustainable diapering solution for today’s busy parents.  The reusable pocket cloth diapers ensure no leaks, no rash and no waste. FuzziBunz® diapers include three layers: 1) a waterproof outer barrier to keep wetness contained, 2) a soft microfleece inner layer that touches a baby’s skin and pulls away moisture, and 3) a unique, pocket-style opening that enables a parent to customize the absorbency using super absorbent micro-terrycloth pads. Stay-at-home-mom, Tereson Dupuy, invented FuzziBunz® in January 1999 in response to her infant son’s chronic diaper rash and her overall dissatisfaction with all available diapers.  Tereson stitched the first FuzziBunz® in her home and a short time later, the modern cloth diapering movement was born. For more information about FuzziBunz® cloth diapers and accessories and to find a list of retailers, please visit www.FuzziBunz.com.



Living In Style Video: FuzziBunz®

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009



Baby Talk Magazine: Eco-Dipe Road Test

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

Baby Talk Magazine 3-09

Baby Talk Magazine



Mother of Invention Tereson Dupuy

Wednesday, October 1st, 2008

Tereson Dupuy on cover of Face Magazine

By: Amanda Bedgood

Tereson Dupuy doesn’t look like a hippie chic. Signature red lipstick. House on the golf course. Founder of a multi-million dollar business. BMW. But she’s certainly doing more than most to make this earth greener.

Just a decade ago, the stay-at-home-mom was sewing together pieces of fleece to make a diaper that would alleviate her son’s incessant diaper rash. She knew then she was on to something huge. Something that would fulfill what she always believed would be her destiny of success — owning her own business — and something that would be environmentally friendly.
Necessity truly is the mother of invention.

* * *

At age 16, Tereson vividly remembers being convinced she possessed the next “big idea.”

“I would jump on the counter and say ‘I have the best idea,’” she says now from her kitchen table.
“I never saw myself working for someone,” she says. “I always knew I would invent something, offer a service. I was always looking.”

That something came along when her second of three children was three months old. Her son Eden had a diaper rash that couldn’t be calmed. Tereson switched to cloth diapers, which lack the chemicals often found in disposable diapers that were further irritating Eden’s rash.

But cloth diapers weren’t cutting it, and Tereson knew there had to be something better. Within six months of trying different fabrics and testing her theories, Tereson found what would be the perfect medium — fleece.
“It was $5 for my first piece of fleece,” she recalls.

She found the piece of lime green fleece she picked up at Wal-Mart absorbent, and it actually left Eden dry. She hit an Internet swap board for cloth diaper users and never looked back.

She named her new diapers FuzziBunz® and named the company Mother of Eden. She made her own logo and Web site at home.

Within two months, unable to keep up with demand, she delegated sewing duties. Admitting quickly she’s not much of a seamstress, Tereson only could complete about 20 FuzziBunz® a week.

As the money came in, Tereson would buy more materials. To this day, she has remained self-funded. And like those first days when she couldn’t keep up with demand, she still can’t keep up, despite manufacturers producing 10,000 a week.

“My major obstacle is that I can never produce to demand,” Tereson says.

She says new partnerships are opening up larger avenues that soon will boost production and put her in stores like Target and Babies R Us.

* * *

Perhaps one of the most interesting things about this success story is where it has landed Tereson — squarely in the natural product industry. Not in baby world. And she likes it there.

“Before green was popular, I knew it was an environmentally-friendly product. It took the world a while to catch up,” she says.

According to the National Association of Diaper Services, which promotes cloth diapers, there are 18 billion single-use diapers thrown into landfills each year. Disposable diapers make up the third-largest source of solid waste in landfills, after newspapers and food and beverage containers. It takes upward of 82,000 tons of plastic and 1.3 million tons of wood pulp, or a quarter-million trees, to manufacture the disposable diapers that cover the bottoms of 90 percent of the babies born in this country.

And while FuzziBunz® are environmentally friendly now, Tereson said they are on the brink of doing more. Within the year, she plans to have all aspects of the biodegradable portion of the diapers perfected so that when babies are potty-trained the FuzziBunz® are completely biodegradable.

“We’re getting the right materials, and we’ll be the first reusable diaper to do this,” she says of the total biodegradable venture. “We’re committed to being as green as we can be.”

Whether it’s saving on fuel for shipping, recycling in the office or the type of fabric they use, Tereson says everything they do is through a green lens.

“It extends to every facet,” she says. “How we manufacture, the dyes we use, we recycle at work. We seek

companies that are green. Our business cards are green. Everything we do has that focus. It’s our priority, and it is in my personal life.”

Only weeks ago Tereson told her kids no more Vitamin Water and other bottled drinks until they could get recycling in her neighborhood. Recycling soon arrived.

“Eighty-five percent of water bottles are not recycled,” she tells me with conviction over a cup of coffee.
Wearing a T-shirt made from bamboo that reads “Living the Green Life,” Tereson explains anyone can be green — even the fashion conscious.

“You don’t have to be a hippie to be green. You can be very hip and fashionable and still green,” she says. “It’s a common misperception. People think you have to be in Birkenstocks and hippie clothes. You don’t.”
And while Tereson isn’t a hippie chic, she has in the last few years discovered a love of the outdoors.
She’s discovered a lot in a few years following a rough divorce and life as a single mother of three children.
Like her seemingly contrasting interests in beauty and the environment, which pair perfectly, her entrenchment in business and love of mothering also work beautifully together.

So, how does this mother of three who sits at the helm of a multi-million dollar business do it all? It starts with the basics, she explains.

“Exercise, keeping a healthy lifestyle, eating well. It keeps you young and fit. If I don’t do it I’m miserable,” she says. “And I find joy. Find things in life you enjoy and make it a priority. Not getting bogged down and staying young and happy. Make joy a priority.”

Easier said than done at times, especially for a woman who literally sleeps with her Blackberry. But Tereson has learned to delegate, and she finds comfort in her new love of the outdoors. Could it be because there’s not a lot of reception when hiking a mountain or scuba diving the deep sea?

“I have to physically remove myself from an Internet connection,” she says. “I have to force myself to do those things, though. It’s part of my plan of self care.”

Learning to take care of herself is a fairly recent revelation. After her divorce less than five years ago, Tereson realized a lot about doing things by herself.

“I can do anything I want on my own,” she says. “I can be a successful woman by myself and be independent and reach my goals. I can hook up a generator. Not that I don’t need other people. But I can do anything.”
It’s that unstoppable attitude, which probably led to her success.

“I speak in when’s, not ifs. Can’ts and ifs are not in the vocabulary,” she says. “When and can are in the vocabulary.”

It’s an attitude she hopes to impart on Sarah, 13, Eden, 10 and Bennett, 6.

* * *

At the age of 38, Tereson has learned many lessons: Never mix business and personal life. Know whatever you’re going through will eventually be over. Nothing can be perfect. Let it go.

They all are lessons that are hard for a woman to learn while we often intertwine our professional lives and personal ones.

“Keep business business and personal personal,” she says. “To quote Donald Trump, ‘It’s nothing personal, just business.’ As women, we are emotional. To run a business keep things separate.”

Keeping that emotional life separate can be a challenge when you’re struggling through a difficult time, and Tereson knows this. She’s been there.

“Know it will eventually be over, and you can get through it,” she says of challenging times, like divorce. “It’s not the end of the world. It gets better. It’s not the end; sometimes it’s the beginning.”

Learning to let go is perhaps one of Tereson’s greatest lessons learned. It translates to everything. As a woman, you’re wearing enough hats to make your head spin. If you’re going to do it all, accept it can’t all be flawless.
“Some things have to wait,” she says. “To balance, you have to let things go and accept they won’t be perfect.”

Tereson Dupuy article in Face Magazine

Tereson Dupuy, Inventor of FuzziBunz® diapers



Matthew McConaughey and Camila Alves Personally Thank FuzziBunz® for Baby Levi’s New Cloth Diaper Stash

Friday, September 19th, 2008

Levi Alves McConaughey may be the next Hollywood baby in cloth diapers

LAFAYETTE, La.When baby Levi was born to proud parents, Matthew McConaughey and Camilla Alves, Mother of Eden, the makers of the patented FuzziBunz® pocket-style cloth diapers, in collaboration with BopStarBaby, a celebrity gifting company, sent the McConaughey family a starter set of FuzziBunz® cloth diapers.

Fast forward several weeks:  the McConaughey clan sent a personal thank you note to Mother of Eden founder and FuzziBunz® inventor, Tereson Dupuy.  The note acknowledged the great history behind FuzziBunz® diapers and thanked Dupuy for the blue, turquoise and green diapers she sent.

“We feel it’s important to encourage all families – celebrities or not – to make eco-friendly choices when raising their new baby,” says Dupuy.  “We are honored that Levi Alves McConaughey may just be the next celebrity baby to make the important fashion statement that green is good!”

The McConaughey’s join a group of eco-minded celebrity parents known to be using FuzziBunz® cloth diapers including Tori Spelling, Brad Paisley and Kimberly Williams, Anna Belknap (CSI NY), and Diana Farr (Numb$rs).  It has also been widely-reported that Dave Matthews, Madonna, and Maggie Gyllenhaal’s babies use cloth diapers too.

Letter from Matthew McConaughey and Camilla Alves




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