Kids' Pajamas: What to Look For

Toddler Boys Wall-E Long Sleeve Pajamas

An Explosion of Style

The kids' bedtime clothing market has taken us from a couple of practical sleeping garments to an entire wardrobe of sleeping styles, exploding with colors and themes. Pajamas are available for different seasons and climates to ensure year-round sleeping comfort for children. Lightweight, breathable cotton pajamas keep kids cool during the warm months; flannel is cozy and combats fall chills, and full or double-fleece pajamas keep kids snuggly warm in the dead of winter. Footed pajamas are a solution to cold feet; however, not all kids appreciate the once-piece of footed confinement, and many still prefer socks.

Sleepwear Solutions

One-piece footed styles are a preferred choice for infants, but as kids learn to dress themselves, two-piece footless styles are easier to manipulate. Ribbed cuffs keep out drafts and are best for active children. Specialty and licensed PJs are continuously released with pictures of kids' favorite characters and sports. Despite this overwhelming variety, choosing a child's sleep wardrobe is still simple: pick fabrics that are easy to care for, durable, and safe, and designs that are fun for your child. As kids approach the teenage years, their choice of sleeping attire can range from sweats to cool and relaxing silk blends, or fashionable styles that imitate peers or people in roles that appear attractive, powerful, or admirable.

Safety First

All kids' sleepwear should conform to age-appropriate safety guidelines and should always be flame retardant. In fact, children's sleepwear in sizes 0-14 is required to be flame retardant-some fabrics naturally meet this requirement, others require addition of chemicals. The Consumer Product Safety Commission discourages the use of the chemical known as Tris as a flame retardant in children's clothing however, even Tris-treated fabrics are considered safe after 3-4 washings. Acetate, acetate blends, triacetate, and triacetate blends are treated with Tris; 100% cotton and nylon require flame retardant chemical additives; 100% polyester may be treated with Tris or other chemicals; modacrylic, matrix, Vinyon, and their blends require no chemical additives. Labeling and manufacturer's product information should help you identify the chemical additives. Pajamas and other flame-retardant clothing should be washed before wearing.


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