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Safety Tips for Choosing Children’s Furniture

When sourcing children’s furniture, your first consideration may be how bright, fun, and funky it is, or whether it works within the overall theme of your child’s bedroom or nursery. Or, perhaps you’ve been offered the gift of family furniture, passed down through the generations?

Obviously, style or sentiment are big considerations, but it’s even more crucial that you keep safety in mind when choosing kids’ furniture. Certain everyday items have particular safety issues.

Below you will find a few safety tips for you to keep in mind while looking for children’s furniture. Make sure to go to your local furniture store, look around, test (if possible) and ask questions about safety features. 

Antique, Vintage, or Pre-Used Furniture Should Conform to Current Safety Standards

 Once very popular, drop-side style of cribs have been prohibited for the last couple of years in the U.S and Canada. A child could slip down between the drop-side and the base of the crib, become trapped, and potentially suffocate. Also, entrapment is a big issue. Use the two-finger rule. Make sure you can’t insert more than two fingers between the edge of the mattress and the sides of the crib (or bed rails). If you can, your child can become trapped.

Plain common sense is a good guide; don’t use old cribs (or other furniture) with missing slats or rails, or that are unstable or shaky. Contemporary high chairs require safety straps — old-style chairs may lack these, so if you can’t part with that piece of Victorian nostalgia, attach a safety harness (and always watch over any child in a high chair).

Old furniture can have rough edges, splinters, and rusty or missing parts. Loose nails, hinges and screws can scratch; they can also cause the furniture to fall apart. Old furniture upholstery can be very flammable. Replace old chair cushions or old bed and cot mattresses with well-fitting, new upholstery that conforms to current safety standards.

Children’s Furniture Should be Made of Appropriate Materials

That fab glass coffee table may be all very well in your cutting edge loft-style apartment, but children and glass don’t go well together: Anything fragile, breakable and potentially dangerous has no place in a nursery or kids’ bedroom. Similarly, metal furniture, like beds or chairs, are too hard and unyielding. Sturdy, smooth plastic or polished wood is ideal.

Make Sure the Furniture Is Non-Slip

This one’s a no-brainer. Lightweight, brightly coloured tables and chairs may look sweet and appealing, but if they slip when in use, they’re an accident waiting to happen. Tables that are easily moved or pushed over are not a good choice for placing hot food and drink on, for example. Children must not be placed in, or on, furniture that can easily fall over.

Children’s Furniture Should Never Have Sharp Corners or Edges

If you have a dining or kitchen table with sharp corners, this is a hazard for children, who like to run around and whose faces are possibly even at table height. Either don’t buy them or pad them with something. But as a good rule of thumb, never invest in, or inherit, furniture that can easily cause damage to your children if they bump into it.

Painted Furniture Should Never Be Toxic

All furniture, not just furniture for a kid’s bedroom or nursery, must conform to present-day safety standards, and this is particularly true of paint finishes. Anyone who’s gone through the pain of a teething child knows how a child can gnaw away at the edges of bed rails or high chairs. It’s true! So, it’s even more essential that a little one’s furniture is never covered in lead-based or toxic paint.

Buy Appropriate Beds

Never place a child who’s aged under 6 years old on the top bunk of bunk beds. Make sure the top bunk has a guard rail on each side — not just on the wall side. Make sure the ladder has no missing rungs, is not slippy, and is firmly attached to the side of the top bunk.

Mattresses should snuggly fit around all four sides of a bed. There should also be adequate depth from the top of the mattress to the tops of any safety rails so that your very small child can’t fall out of bed.

Choose Lower, Wider Dressers for Children’s Storage

To prevent your child from falling when trying to access his toys or belongings from dressers, perhaps by way of climbing onto open drawers, buy furniture for storage that is low-level and has a firm, wide base. Also consider anchoring kids’ furniture — cupboards, drawers, bookcases, and wardrobes — to the wall, so a child can’t pull them down. Consider placing safety locks on lower drawers when your children are very young.

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