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Hi everyone! I need a little help. Our newborn is multiracial (though skin and hair seem pretty characteristically AA), but her skin is somewhat dry... especially around her face. Anything special that you'd recommend for moisturizing after baths? Right now we are using Weleda infant lotion, but I'm not sure if there are better suggestions for AA skin. She just has a little chapping on her cheeks and chin.
Also, anything special I should be doing with her hair just after baths? It doesn't seem to be dry, but I don't want it to dry out.
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Nevada Jen
You can buy coconut oil in the oil/salad dressing area at most grocery stores. That's my preference just because its gentle and has no scent and is cheap. Depending on you house temp, it may stay as oil or harden. Personally, I prefer to put mine in a dixie cup in the fridge to harden it up and then I take it out and bring it to the shower with me. After the shower its just warm enough to pop out of the dixie cup and be used like a bar of soap. Mini ice cube trays of it would work well for baby sized bodies.
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GATI
Thanks for all the great suggestions. We've washed her hair about twice a week, but it seems to get really greasy and starts laying completely flat with the curl completely relaxed if we don't wash it after about 4-5 days. I'll watch closely for signs of drying out.
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I think shea butter sounds like a good idea, although I don't have any personal experience with it. I don't think I had heard of it yet when my kids were little. I really liked Eucerin cream, and used it on skin and hair. Also, I rarely used any kind of cleaning product on them, while they were little babies. My first biracial baby peeled a lot until I started using nothing but warm water and a soft wash cloth on him. He had a big birth mark on the back of his head that peeled so much that it looked like a big scab all the time. When I stopped using anything but water on it, it stopped peeling and the hair grew there and covered it. I can't remember if I was using Eucerin by then, or not. His second child is due in June, so it has been a while!I found doing some exfoliating important, because any dead cells really show up on darker skin. Just a soft terrycloth washcloth was enough, though. I also found it very helpful to rub the cream between both of my palms and then kind of blot it all over the skin, immediately after the bath. That helped seal the moisture in, without making the skin oily. I have seen moms get a bit carried away and their babies get some bumps from pores being clogged by too much oil.Congrats on the baby!
Ok, after some trial and error we are really liking the coconut oil... especially how it absorbs into the skin so well. However, we are finding that after a while we're getting a build up of dead skin cells and oil ( mostly on the forehead). It's happening a day after the bath. She otherwise doesn't need a bath. I feel like I'm creating a vicious cycle, because if we bathe again, then we dry out her poor skin more.
Should I just exfoliate that area and then reapply coconut oil or is that still doing the same cycle of drying that I don't want?
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I think I would try just sponging her off with a warm washcloth on the days you don't bathe her. One thing you can try is putting a few drops of the coconut oil in the water you dip the washcloth in, so you are just getting a tiny bit of it all over her. It is interesting, all of the issues we CC parents find with our brown babies. About 60% of my high school and college friends were something other than CC. Yet, I had never had any occasion to learn about issues with brown-skinned infants. The Mongolian spots totally shocked me, with my first biracial baby, until I found out what they were. My youngest child, who is Haitian/Filipina, had very widespread and dark Mongolian spots that didn't fade until she was about five. We did a lot of boating in the summer and I would often see people looking at her back, obviously concerned about what they thought were bruises. I would just tell them what they were.
Tonight I think I finally got it dialed in just right. Coconut oil while the skin was still damp and on the in between days, just a light washcloth rub on the affected areas followed by coconut oil. We're getting there.
I want all the folks in the neighborhood that I'm doing a great job... and she really has beautiful skin and I want to show it off!
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We just had a follow-up with the dermatologist about a week ago! My little one is biracial and has extremely dry skin! The dermatologist she sees says to bathe her daily in luke warm water! I was skipping baths as I thought it was drying her skin and I was told sitting in the water hydrates and moisturizing locks in the moisture after the tubby! We were told to use NO soap except only neutregena glycerin bar if needed, pat her dry (no rubbing and leave skin damp) and follow up with hydrolatum! Been doing this for about a week and her skins glows and not a dry spot on her!!!!!! Her Dr wrote a prescription for the hydrolatum and her insurance covered it.