Life is full of choices! Some we make almost unconsciously, while others are considered for a long time. All choices have consequences, and some choices make a difference.
When you choose the Sebra Bed, you choose, either consciously or subconsciously: to welcome a Danish-designed generational bed into your home, and into your family. to invest in an eco-labelled children’s bed. to purchase a bed made from FSC™-certified wood. |
FSC™ – the Forest Stewardship Council™ – is a global non-profit organisation that promotes responsible forestry worldwide. FSC™ develops standards based on recognised principles of responsible forestry, supported by environmental, social and economic stakeholders. Look for our FSC™-certified products. |
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Your child needs sleep to develop and grow. The Sebra Bed, Baby & Jr. grows and develops with your child. A generational bed, which can be handed down – from child to child, from family to family.
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Stage 1This stage is suitable for the infant. The raised bed base makes it easier to lift your baby up from the bed and lay him/her in the bed. The raised bed base makes it easier for you to pick up your child safely and securely, and to better support your baby’s head and neck when placing them down on the bed. This is thanks to the short distance to the bed base – which is both safer for the child and better for your back. |
Stage 2This stage is suitable for the child who is starting to show signs of being able to get into a sitting or crawling position. The lowered base and the bed’s distinctive slatted sides and headboards provide safety for your child during his/her first year of life, and ensure that your child cannot roll out when he/she begins to move more, sit or stand upright. The slats of the bed have been cut at the bottom to create a slope, which means that your child cannot get a foothold and climb/fall over the edge of the bed. |
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Stage 3This stage is suitable for the child who is showing signs of wanting to climb or has grown big enough to be able to crawl/get out of bed unaided. One day your child will be able to, and will also want to, do things on his/her own, and hopefully you will enjoy the patter of tiny feet in the mornings (and not in the middle of the night) when, for safety reasons, you have removed one or both sides. Around the age of two-and-a-half, many children begin to signal that they do not want to be in a ‘cot’ anymore - some do it earlier - others later. It is important to look for these signs so that the sides can be taken off before your child attempts to do so on his/her own. |