Cotton Bodysuit
Cotton Bodysuit
SKU:HT3O-12mth
Clothing Prem to 18 Months
| Size | Age Guide | Weight | Height |
|---|---|---|---|
| Premature | Premature or Small Newborn | Up to 4Kg | Up to 55cm |
| Newborn | 0-3 months | 4-6Kg | Up to 62cm |
| 3 Month | 3-6 months | 6-8Kg | Up to 68cm |
| 6 Month | 6-12 Month | 8-10Kg | Up to 76cm |
| 12 Month | 12-18 Month | 10-12Kg | Up to 84cm |
| 18 Month | 18-24 Month | 12-14Kg | Up to 92cm |
Clothing 2 to 6 Years
| Size | Age Guide | Height | Chest | Waist | Hip |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 Year | 2-3 Years | Up to 100 cm | 56 | 51 | 58 |
| 3 Year | 3-4 Years | Up to 105 cm | 58 | 53 | 60 |
| 4 Year | 4-5 Years | Up to 110 cm | 60 | 55 | 62 |
| 5 Year | 5-6 Years | Up to 115 cm | 62 | 57 | 64 |
| 6 Year | 6-7 Years | Up to 120 cm | 64 | 59 | 66 |
Beanie Size Guide
| Size | Head Circumference | Age Guide |
|---|---|---|
| Premature | 31-35 cm | Premature or Small Newborn |
| Newborn | 35-40 cm | Newborn |
| Small | 40-43 cm | 3-6 Months |
| Medium | 43-47 cm | 6-18 Months |
| Large | 47-52 cm | 18-3 Years |
Sunhat Size Guide
| Size | Head Circumference | Age Guide |
|---|---|---|
| Newborn | 37-40 cm | Newborn |
| Small | 40-43 cm | 3-6 Months |
| Medium | 43-46 cm | 6-12 Months |
| Large | 46-49 cm | 12-24 Months |
| Xtra Large | 49-54 cm | 2-4 Years |
Sleep Pods Size Guide
| Size | Weight | Age Guide | Measurement(Back to Hem) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Newborn | 0-6 kgs | 0-3 Months | 60.5 cm |
| Small | 0-8 kgs | 3-6 Months | 66 cm |
Booties Size Guide
| Size | Age Guide |
|---|---|
| Newborn | 0-3 Months |
| Small | 3-6 Months |
| Medium | 6-12 Months |
| Large | 12-18 Months |
Pretty Brave Baby
| Foot Length (mm) | Insole Length (mm) | EU | UK | Age | INT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 95-104 | 110 | 16/17 | 2 | 0-6m | S |
| 104-114 | 118 | 18 | 3 | 6-12m | M |
| 114-123 | 127 | 19/20 | 4.5 | 12-18m | L |
| 123-137 | 142 | 21/22 | 5.5 | 16-22m | XL |
Pretty Brave 1st Walker
| Foot Length (mm) | Insole Length (mm) | EU | UK | Age |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 114-120 | 125-128 | 19 | 3 | 1 yr |
| 120-126 | 132-135 | 20 | 3.5 | 1-2 yrs |
| 126-132 | 138.5-141.5 | 21 | 4.5 | 1-2 yrs |
| 132-138 | 145-148.5 | 22 | 5 | 2 yrs |
Crywolf Swim Nappy
| Size | Length (waist to crotch) | Crotch Width (side to side) |
|---|---|---|
| 0-1 yr | 1-2 yrs | |
| 37 | 38 | |
| 14.5 | 15.5 |
Crywolf Rash Suit
| Size | Length (back neck to crotch) | Chest (arm to arm) | Waist (side to side) | Sleeve (neck to cuff) | Neck Opening(diameter) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6-12 Months | 1 yr | 2 yrs | 3 yrs | ||
| 40 | 42 | 44 | 46 | ||
| 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | ||
| 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | ||
| 30 | 31.5 | 33 | 34.5 | ||
| 13.25 | 13.25 | 13.8 | 14.3 |
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Overview
Overview
Discover the Hidden Treasures of Summer Through Your Baby's Eyes, where Every Cuddle, Snuggle, and Giggle Shines with Joy.
Embrace the warmth of summer with Dimples fashion collection, Hidden Treasures. With outfits inspired by the earth's sweetest secrets, perfect for keeping your baby cool, cozy, and oh-so-cute. The Organic cotton combines with delightful designs, ensuring your baby enjoys the very best in both style and sustainability.
This Organic Cotton bodysuit can be worn all year long. They offer good body coverage, and do a great job of keeping baby warm. Your little one will love the comfort this body suit provides. They have a wonderful stretch making this bodysuit a great addition to your baby’s wardrobe.
Fit & Care
Fit & Care
Delivery and Returns
Delivery and Returns
- Delivery: Free within NZ on orders over $100 (excluding bulky items) or $8 standard shipping
- Returns: Accepted within 14 days of receipt with proof of purchase
- Some items are excluded from returns including sale items, hardware, car seats, prams, monitors and personal items - please click here for the full list.
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From Hobby to 'Family' Business
As the first few of her fourteen children came along, our founder Jane Anne McAllister found that store-bought clothes just didn’t have the quality she wanted for her babies. They also lacked the strength to endure being passed from one baby to the next and still look good, or even stay intact. So she sourced the best fabrics and began making her baby clothes, lovingly embroidering each item by hand. That was the start of Dimples. Founded in 1992, today, we still dedicate the same care and time that Jane gave to those first garments. We’re one of the few clothing companies that still manufacture in NZ, which lets us make sure each garment is of the highest quality. It also means that our manufacturing is inherently ethical – no unknown, offshore factories with little oversight of working conditions, wages or environmental issues. So who makes our clothes? Our sewing machinists are part of our family, and all highly-skilled craftspeople. Karen has been with us for about seven years, putting her five decades of experience into every garment. Meet Karen – a Dimples sewer As a teenager, Karen finished school in December and reached school-leaving age in January, with dreams of training as a hairdresser. Her parents had other ideas – the hairdressing job didn’t start until mid-February, and they weren’t having her underfoot with nothing to do all that time. “I had to do what my parents told me to. So they marched me into town and got me a sewing job, and that’s where I stayed. I started in the city – 50 years ago. Yes, it was a craft.” ‘Made-in-NZ’ – an endangered species Back when Karen started her working life, a trained machinist could walk out of one job and into another almost immediately. That’s changed now. Textile, leather, clothing and footwear manufacturing make up only 5% of New Zealand’s manufacturing sector, down from 8% in 2008. [1] The number of jobs filled by paid employees in the clothing and knitted-product manufacturing industry fell nearly 60 percent – from 9,550 to 4,120 between 1986 and 2012 [2] . Taking pride in the quality As a professional machinist, Karen says the shift towards international production might make clothes cheaper, but they’re often very poorly constructed. The difference, she says, is that she was trained to complete a whole garment rather than doing piece-work. International garment factories tend to have a group of people just sewing collars, cuffs or hems, for example. “Everything’s done on the big stitch, no back-tacking. Within weeks the seams come apart.” At Dimples, we can turn out high-quality garments because we employ craftspeople like Karen – they have very high standards and the skills to back it up. Karen, in particular was known for her precision and was often used as a sample machinist. “Everything had to be spot on. It was an example – then other sewers had to make it exactly like the sample.” The Dimples family The inclusive culture we foster at Dimples helps our engaged and committed staff produce their best work in a happy, supportive atmosphere. Karen truly thinks the Dimples ‘family’ are lovely people to work for. “I’ve worked for a lot of people, and some of the other bosses were terrible. But Jane is just fantastic. When my grandkids were born, I got a beautiful gift for each baby. At Dimples, they care about you. They’re just nice people.”
Learn moreMust-have items to pack in your nappy bag
The Ultimate Nappy Bag Checklist: Be Ready for Anything Leaving the house without your nappy bag? That’s the kind of chaos every parent dreads. Whether it’s a surprise nappy blowout or a teething meltdown mid-supermarket shop, being prepared can turn potential disasters into minor hiccups. That said, there’s a balance to strike. Overpacking can make your bag heavy and hard to manage — underpacking leaves you without the essentials when you need them most. What you pack depends on your baby’s age, where you’re going, and how long you’ll be out. To make things easier, here’s your ultimate nappy bag checklist - designed to help you leave the house calm, confident, and ready for anything. Start with the right bag You’ll want a nappy bag that’s both practical and stylish. Something that works for both parents and doesn’t scream “baby gear.” Look for one with plenty of compartments, bottle holders, and enough space to fit everything without being bulky. We have a gorgeous range of stylish bags, shop them here. What to pack For changing: Nappies – more than you think you’ll need Baby wipes – either travel packs or your own stash in a reusable snap-lock bag. Nappy rash cream – keep a small tube in your bag. Change mat – compact and easy to clean. Most good nappy bags come with one, you can also get disposable ones. Nappy disposal bags – for dirty nappies or any messy surprises. Hand sanitiser or wipes – for quick cleanups when a bathroom’s not nearby. Spare clothes – at least one full change, maybe two if you’re toilet training. Warm layers in case the temperature drops. For feeding: Bibs – always helpful for dribbles or spills. Bottles and formula – if bottle-feeding, bring everything you’ll need. An insulated bottle can be handy too. Muslin cloth or burp cloth – great for burping and as a lightweight feeding cover. Baby food and utensils – a travel pouch, and spoon and bowl if you’re onto solids. General extras: Teething toy or small distraction – for those fussy moments on the go. First-aid basics – baby sunscreen, plasters Sunhat and beanie – be ready for any weather. Dummy – keep a spare in the bag so you’re never caught short. Wrap – useful as a swaddle, sunshade, blanket, or emergency carrier. Don’t forget Mum’s must-haves: Breast pads – to prevent leaks if you’re nursing. Water and snacks – a must when you're running on empty. Spare top and bra – messes don’t just happen to the baby! Sunscreen and hat – you’ll need protection too. Final tip: restock after each outing Once you’re home, do a quick check and restock your nappy bag so you’re ready to go next time. Think about the different scenarios you might face and pack with those in mind. Multipurpose items help you save space and stay organised — no need to carry the kitchen sink!
Learn moreWhy Buy New Zealand Made Clothes?
From garments more well-travelled than most of us to clothing produced in factories not quite up to scratch – the backstory of what we buy has become an increasingly hot topic. Keeping shopping habits local is an easy way to not only do your bit for the environment but also support the New Zealand economy and the people who live here. Better still, buying New Zealand-made no longer means compromising on quality or choice – in fact, it’s typically quite the opposite! Do it for the birds and the bees (literally) The environmental impact of clothing sourced overseas is huge. Buying local often means reducing ecologically unfriendly packaging, and will certainly cut out vast amounts of fossil fuels in transport. Clothing made in New Zealand also complies with strict guidelines, which is a big win for the environment in an industry that is notoriously hard on the planet – no pesticide and fabric-dye-filled runoff contaminating water supplies here thanks! Feelgood tip – swap those well-travelled goods with locally-made merchandise. Fast fashion or future-friendly? The days of patching worn jeans and sewing up holes in socks are long gone – popping to the shops for a wallet-friendly replacement is just too easy. But with prices so low, something’s got to give – whether it’s the quality of raw materials, worker conditions, or the standard of the finished product. This fast-fashion movement ironically has you popping to the shops for replacements a whole lot more often! All this disposable fashion also becomes a major landfill problem. Synthetic fabrics are much cheaper to produce (they make up about 60% of a typical closet) and can go on to live hundreds of years after parting ways with your wardrobe. On the flip side, buying New Zealand-made means these items live up to local production standards, and are far more likely to survive playground adventures and multiple trips through the washing machine. They might even look good enough to pass on to family or friends once you’re done with them – recycling at its best! Feelgood tip – invest in quality, locally made items that can be passed on. Guilt and hassle-free shopping Shop-a-holics rejoice! If you’re buying locally produced goods, pat yourself on the back for your contribution to the local economy. You’re supporting fair, local employment and helping to keep New Zealand businesses alive and able to compete with the big guys. Shop-a-holics rejoice some more! If you’re buying locally produced goods and have accidentally bought the wrong size for your little one, it’s as easy as popping into a store or a local phone call to fix your problem. Local businesses are usually happy to help (as each customer is important) whereas it’s likely you’re literally one in a million for big global companies. Even finding contact details can be a challenge! Feelgood tip – shopping local simply supports New Zealanders. Dimples' does it differently No compromises here, just adorable, high-quality clothing, using high-quality raw materials, produced by fairly treated Kiwi workers! Our commitment to the environment hasn’t changed as the business has evolved and grown, and neither has our commitment to our workers. All Dimples clothing is made here in New Zealand from locally sourced merino (or from our neighbouring Australian sheep) and pure organic certified cotton (to ensure the impact of cotton farming is minimal). We don’t have a huge factory producing our clothing – instead, our expert sewers work from their homes. It’s essentially a scaled-up version of the small home workshop where it all started. The end result is hard-wearing, long-lasting clothing – that stays looking super cute for longer. Feelgood tip – buy New Zealand made.
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