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Born Free Stage 2 Nipples- Twin Pack Studio : Born Free by Born Free Brand : Born Free Model : 20002 Release Date : 2006-11-01 Publisher : Born Free Minimum Age : 3 Months Maximum Age : 6 Years Manufacturer Minimum Age : 3 Years Manufacturer Maximum Age : 6 Years Availability : Usually ships in 1-2 business days EAN : 0853049001084 UPC : 853049001084 Avg. Customer Rating: (based on 6 reviews)
List Price : $6.99 Our Price : $2.00
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Contains two high grade silicone nipples per package
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Designed to simulate natural feeding
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Available in multiple flow rates to accommdate desired feeding level
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Product Description |
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Twin-Pack Level 2 Medium Flow wide neck BornFree⢠Nipples, recommended for babies of 3-6 months. |
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softer |
I have born free stage 1 nipples that came with the bottles, and these seem even softer, which i thought was strange. It's not a good thing or a bad thing though, just an observation. These nipples are great for my 15 week old. I noticed he was getting fussy while eating, and I think he wasn't getting milk out fast enough. Ever since he's used these, he finishes his bottle in half the time it used to take, and he's happier!
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Unsanitary nipples |
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My son could drink out of it fine, but it won't seem to clean properly after using pediasure strawberry flavor. It just sucks up the smell and who knows what else I bought the glass bottle yesterday, put the pediasure in it an hour ago, he drank it, I washed it, boiled it washed it again, and I simply cannot get the aroma out of this very very soft nipple. |
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Simulate Nature |
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I had no trouble converting my daughter from breast to bottle. They're very natural in texture and shape. |
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Wonderful item!! |
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I changed from Avent bottle to Born Free after the BPA scare. The bottles have never leaked for me and my daughter switched over with no problem. I love Born Free and continue to sing their praises!!! |
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Split easily. Expensive!!! Shop around for less expnesive BPA free options |
Nipples aren't an issue with BPA - they're all rubber of some sort and BPA is strictly an issue with polycarbonate (clear hard plastic, like what's used in car headlamps. bullet proof glass, and cd's.)
The cornerstone of Born Free's marketing campaign is that they are BPA free. What many people overlook in their rush to buy BPA free bottles is that they are hardly the only option. They are, however, about the most expensive.
We have a bunch of the Born Free bottles and sippy cups. Let's just say we're very unhappy because you don't just spend a lot on the original purchase, you spend a huge amount on replacement nipples. Nipples wear out and these seem to wear out much faster than other bottles. At $5+ each, it definitely pays to shop around. |
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