T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
612.1 | Rag Rugs | MKOTS3::NICKERSON | | Thu Oct 14 1993 12:40 | 5 |
| My mother-in-law used a few heavy "rag" type rugs over the edges of
her raised hearth.
This worked well when the grandchildren came over.
Linda
|
612.2 | Toss pilloes | DELNI::DISMUKE | | Thu Oct 14 1993 12:57 | 7 |
| I used large throw pillows on the edges of my raised hearth (this was
for visiting children - mine were no longer toddlers when we had a
fireplace). When you Don't need them, toss 'em back on the couch or
stack them in the corner.
-sandy
|
612.3 | Ordered from catalog - works great for us | LMOPST::MALIN::GOODWIN | Malin Goodwin | Thu Oct 14 1993 13:11 | 18 |
| I ordered a "hearth-guard" from one of the catalogs (Safety First or similar,
can't really remember)
It has a metal frame that you screw tight so it sits really good, and has thick
foam-like padding over the metal frame. It is adjustable to fit different sizes
of fire places. Not hard to install at all, (I did it while dad cleared the
kitchen after dinner.)
It was kind of expensive ~ $60 dollars, but well worth mum's and dad's peace
of mind if nothing else. There was a cheaper model that fastened with
adhesive tape, it did not sound to durable so I never considered that model.
We have the fireplace in the family room where most of the indoor play
activity is taking place, I'm really glad that I got it installed.
/Malin
|
612.4 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | John 3:16 - Your life depends on it! | Thu Oct 14 1993 13:28 | 10 |
|
My mom's got a raised hearth, and never child-proofed it per se
(she watches Emily at her home 2 days a week). She's got a few
things strategically place near the corners (a large floor plant
and a rocking chair), which sort of made the hearth unnoticeable.
I don't know if this type of "blockading" would work for you, but
it's certainly cheaper.
Karen
|
612.5 | Pipe insulation worked for us. | SALEM::SULLIVAN_D | | Thu Oct 14 1993 14:23 | 5 |
| We got creative and used pipe insulation. It comes in approximately 3
or 4 foot sections and has a slit down the length of it, which fits
nicely over the edges of our harth. It can be found at any home or
hardware store.
-Dave-
|
612.6 | idea for babyproofing | BRAT::ALBERT | | Thu Oct 14 1993 14:53 | 6 |
| Since having my two girls, my mom came up with a good idea. She bought
a really pretty rug to fit over the cement, it looks good and it keeps
the kids from hurting themselves when and if they fall against it...
It's the right size and it fits great. It's like a runner rug maybe 4
or 5 feet long.
|
612.7 | NOTE OF THANKS | KAHALA::SORAREO | | Thu Oct 14 1993 17:05 | 19 |
| Hi,
I just wanted to thank all of you for your wonderful ideas.
It's great to know that their are alternatives, whereas, before
I hadn't even a clue!
I guess I better get to work because it looks as though my
daughter will be crawling very shortly!!
Again, thanks so much.
Sue
|
612.8 | | MOIRA::FAIMAN | light upon the figured leaf | Thu Oct 14 1993 17:52 | 5 |
| The foam pipe insulation was our solution, too. (It's still there, even though
Elspeth is 12 now!) Our "hearth" is actually a suspended graystone slab about
1-1/2" thick, so the insulation just slips right over the edge.
-Neil
|
612.9 | pillows work for us | LINGO::MARSH | The dolphins have the answer | Fri Oct 15 1993 06:09 | 9 |
|
We have a huge brick hearth which is raised about 4 inches from the
floor. I have put foam pillows over all the edges and have placed a
small table at one end to form a barrier. This works fine. When we do
have an open fire, we move everything out of the way and NEVER leave
Rebecca alone in the room.
Celia
|
612.10 | | STAR::AWHITNEY | | Fri Oct 15 1993 11:52 | 10 |
| I never even thought about kid-proofing a hearth until my daughter
ended up with 11 stitches in the low-center part of her forehead.
Now, there is an old comforter thrown over it...The doctors at the
emergency room said that this is a good cheap idea that works well.
Pillows sound like a good idea too...
I'm glad that you're thinking about this now so you don't have to
worry about any stitches or unnecessary accidents....
|
612.11 | rug & lots of pillows | KAHALA::PALUBINSKAS | | Fri Oct 15 1993 13:32 | 6 |
| We have a brick hearth raised about 4 inches from the floor. I put a
carpet which covers all the bricks down to the floor. I then placed
about 10 different pillows (different colors) to match the room in
front of the glass fireplace doors. Make a great sitting place...the
kids also like to lay down with their blankies up there.
|
612.12 | Careful with the Pillows | SELLIT::KOCZWARA | | Fri Oct 15 1993 16:22 | 13 |
| Be careful with the pillows. I found out the hard way, when
someone moved on of the pillows slightly off the fireplace hearth.
My oldest, Kevin was about 3 years old and jumped onto the pillow
landing his forehead on the hearth. I was home at the time and
was in the room, but it happened so quickly that I didn't have
time to grab him. We ended up at the hospital emergency room.
Kevin ended up with 7 stitches.
We still have pillows but the carpet idea sounds alot better
to me. With three children, two who "love" to wrestle, I'm
constantly checking to make sure the pillow are over the hearth.
- Pat K.
|
612.13 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | John 3:16 - Your life depends on it! | Mon Oct 18 1993 09:58 | 14 |
|
Last year, I wouldn't allow a fire if Emily was up. The brass on
the fireplace doors gets very hot, and even burned me. I don't think I'll
allow them again this year - even with us in the room, I don't like the idea
of Emily underfoot while the fire's being stoked/tended.
About hearths... ours is not raised, but Emily still managed to fall on ours
and cut a pretty mean gash in her head when she was just 6 months old. We
also happened to have had a blizzard the night before, and the driveway
had 2+ feet of snow in it. Luckily, the bleeding stopped within moments and
it healed ok without stitches. Her pedi said it probably could have used one
or two, but that it had healed fine.
Karen
|
612.14 | Piece of leftover rug | LANDO::REYNOLDS | | Mon Oct 18 1993 10:58 | 17 |
| Good topic! I thought about this from the day Andrew was born.
Our solution was a rug remnant. My father gave us one from a house he
was building. THis works great. Our hearth is also raised a couple of
inches so we just placed the remnant on top on the hearth and put the
fireplace screen on top of the rug to secure it.
You can ask for rug remnants at any carpet store. I'm not sure of the
cost but I bet it's cheaper than any fireplace protector that you can
order from a catalog.
Also, before we got the rug, we draped a sleeping bag over the hearth.
For some reason, this took all the mystery out of the fireplace and
Andrew stoped crawling over to it. It's not pretty but it did the trick
for us.
Karen
|
612.15 | Useful and decorative | WONDER::ENGDAHL | Everything is gonna be all right | Tue Oct 19 1993 09:05 | 18 |
|
I thought about this a lot. I had friends who used sleeping bags draped
over the hearth. I didn't really like the look of this. I had a friend
who used pillows, but I thought that I would always be fighting with
Taylor to leave them where they were. I tried to think of something
decorative and inexpensive.
What I ended up doing is buying some of the prequilted fabric. I folded it
in half and sewed it on three sides, making a big pocket that extended beyond
the hearth about 3 inches on all sides. I put 2 layers of rug pad in the
pocket. I tried batting (the stuff used for pillows/quilts) but this did not
provide enough protection. I tried one layer of rug pad and did the head test
(funny sight to see two adults wacking their heads on a hearth. Things I never
even imagine I would be doing, all for the love of your child!!). I found that
two layers works best.
I like the decorative look so much, I'll probably even leave it there even after
the safety concern has passed!
|
612.16 | How about a woodstove | SOTT::NAULT | | Wed Oct 20 1993 16:01 | 5 |
| Any ideas on how to keep a baby_on_the_move away from a woodstove?
Thanks!
- Barb
|
612.17 | Built-in bumper for raised hearth | SUPER::HARRIS | | Wed Oct 20 1993 16:25 | 36 |
| Our solution was pretty involved, but has been great. We've even
gotten several comments on its appearance...
Our hearth is raised about six or eight inches off the ground. We
originally bought some of those hard rubber strips that come in
sections (available through several baby catalogs). They are
supposed to stick to the bricks. In our case, that only lasted
until my son grabbed, and pulled them right back off (I'd guess
they only work if your toddler has no interest in examining them).
After that, we concluded that the only solution would be one that
Andy couldn't dismantle.
My husband took a piece of plywood, and built a shell that slides
over the top, front and sides. We took the rubber bumpers, and
connected them to the plywood shell. The rubber-edged plywood
was then lined with foam, and the whole thing was covered with
vinyl-backed fabric, secured on the inside with a staple gun.
This "unit" now slides pretty snugly over the hearth. Since it's
padded with a brown/beige vinyl fabric, it melts into the room's
decor just fine. It's even pretty comfortable to sit on. We used
to slide it off whenever we wanted to start a fire (also served
as a pretty reasonable obstruction to getting too close). But,
since we converted to oil heat, it almost never comes off at all.
Total time to make it was about two hours.
One last comment... When we bought the rubber bumpers, it turned
out that, for the length we required, we had to by TWO sets instead
of one. When I was having trouble securing it (to the bricks), I
happened to call the company (think it was Safety First). When I
mentioned this fact, I was told that there SHOULD HAVE BEEN a note
inside, telling you how to purchase a single extra strip directly
from them. Apparently, the place I bought these at removed the note,
so I'd buy two sets!
Peggy
|
612.18 | | OASS::BURDEN_D | This is a Studebaker Year | Wed Oct 20 1993 17:56 | 15 |
| re .16
This may sound cruel, but there have been previous discussions about steam
heaters that may apply. Then again it might have been in the HOMEWORK
conf.....
- They will learn soon enough to stay away!
We had steam heat in a previous house and all it took was one touch and
Anthony knew the meaning of hot. There was no need to put any protective
barrier around the heaters after that. Of course, if you're dealing with
something that can really cause damage, then you need some barrier, but it's
amazing what experience will do.
Dave
|
612.19 | Woodstove - on solution is rod iron | DECWET::WOLFE | | Thu Oct 21 1993 12:29 | 10 |
| We have a friend who built a ~3ft high rod iron fence around their wood stove.
He did a real nice job and it fits well in their house. His reasoning was the
stove was in the family room and the two kids "rough house" there alot so he
plans on keeping it up until the little one is over 6. He is a fireman and has
seen some bad burns hence the reason for the fence.
We struggle with this also, we have a 19 month old who is cautious but takes a
lot of spills/falls when playing. We like using the wood stove as our primary
heat in the winter so we need to do something. We really are hesitant to put up
a fence but have not had many other ideas...
|
612.20 | Block off the area | CSC32::DUBOIS | Discrimination encourages violence | Thu Oct 21 1993 19:52 | 6 |
| We block off our fireplace area with an overturned chair, a play kitchen,
and another piece of furniture, all lined up. This way we can have the fire
or not, and we don't have to worry about the baby getting hurt by the heat or
the bricks.
Carol
|
612.21 | Practical, but not pretty | BAHTAT::CARTER_A | If not you, then who else? | Fri Oct 22 1993 13:21 | 13 |
| The safety guard we are going to buy will fit around the whole hearth
(about 4 foot long), its basically a wire mesh box with a side missing
to the fire and fastens to the wall. It won't win Beautiful House of
The Year Award, but it seems to be secure enough.
In the UK it is a legal requirement that a safety guard is fitted to an
open fire IF a child of under 10 years old is in the room. I think this
really means something bad happens to you if the child is injured and
there isn't a guard fitted! I don't know how this applies to very hot
but enclosed woodburners/multi-fuel stoves.
Andy
|
612.22 | netting | PCOJCT::LOCOVARE | | Mon Oct 25 1993 09:59 | 7 |
|
We bought the netting for the stairs at Toys R US but I have seen
it in catalogs too...
Does anyone know where to get radiator covers???
|
612.23 | | BAHTAT::CARTER_A | If not you, who else? | Mon Oct 25 1993 10:47 | 6 |
| As far as the UK goes, I've seen radiator guards in DIY stores like
Do-It-All and B & Q, and also from mail order catalogues like The Heinz
Baby Club (I don't know where they got our name from but a catalogue
arrived thru' the door shortly before the baby was born!).
Andy
|
612.24 | | ASDS::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Mon Oct 25 1993 11:08 | 10 |
| re: radiator covers...
fwiw - if you're handy with tools, its not that hard to make one. All
you need is the grill cover and some wood for a frame. Many decent
hardware stores will carry both. Then you get exactly what you want,
and you can paint it or stain it to go with your room.
Just a thought..
- Tom
|
612.25 | Handy Grandfathers are great to have around. | MARX::SULLIVAN | We have met the enemy & they is us! | Mon Oct 25 1993 18:35 | 17 |
| Or you can put a retired father to work..
My dad made us a wooden frame which fits around our raised hearth. It is L
shaped so it covers the top and side of the bluestone cap. He then attached
(with glue) foam rubber to all the wood surfaces. Finally, my wife covered
the whole thing with fabric left over from making the drapes in the room.
We are always getting compliments on how nice it looks. And based on the
number of times we've seen the kids heads bounce off of it, it has certainly
done it's job.
I recently saw an add in a catalogue for one of the $70 models. Looked just
like the one my dad made. As far as I know, he came up with the idea on his
own. I've been meaning to give him a hard time about a missed patent
opportunity. :-)
Mark
|
612.26 | Keep fabric away from fireplaces! | LEDS::TRIPP | | Mon Feb 14 1994 13:30 | 18 |
| I was reading this string and do have a problem with the thought of
pilows, batting, blankets and sleeping bags so close to a fire! I
guess as the wife of a firefighter, I see things a little differently
than most. The idea of the fire DOORS, is to stop sparks and hot
embers from escaping from a fireplace, the screen is fairly effective,
but can still allow hot embers out. As well as the fact that material
will ignite or melt if it is manmade, if left near heat long enough.
A friend of mine took the little white picket fences used in the garden
and put it around her wood stove, to keep her children away from the
wood stove. She was, at the time, considering becoming licensed as a
daycare provider. The MA OFC approved of her idea, and told her the
family room could be used for daycare as long as the fence remained. I
believe it was somehow anchored into the floor.
Just a nit, but this is a really serious, and scarey subject to me.
Lyn
|
612.27 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | hate is STILL not a family value | Mon Feb 14 1994 14:30 | 8 |
| Lyn,
Out of curiosity, how far away from the stove did she set up the fence.
Atlehi is now mobile on all fours and trying to pull up on things now,
and I don't know if I'll be able to keep her from toddling until the
need for the stove is over until summer.
Meg
|
612.28 | | DELNI::DISMUKE | | Mon Feb 14 1994 15:11 | 5 |
| Just so's ya know...our fireplace is there for decoration. We hardly
ever use it. When we do use it ... the kids are usually in bed 8^)!
-sandy
|
612.29 | mail order possibilities.. | NOTAPC::PEACOCK | Freedom is not free! | Tue Feb 22 1994 11:00 | 12 |
| For what its worth... there are at least 3 catalogs that I've seen
that carry safety related products... at least one of these has hearth
pads like the ones discussed here, though at the moment I can't recall
which one(s):
Perfectly Safe 800-837-KIDS
1 Step Ahead 800-274-8440
Right Start 800-LITTLE-1
Perhaps a call to these folks would give you some options..
- Tom
|
612.30 | parameters for a fence | LEDS::TRIPP | | Tue Feb 22 1994 13:24 | 18 |
| re the question a couple back, the fence was probably 2 feet tall, and
I really didn't get a good look how, but was definitely anchored to the
flooring somehow. It was probably set back from the stove by 3 feet.
This was a coal burning stove, and the coal bin itself was proably 4
feet tall, with no access to it unless you were an adult height person,
since it too was near the stove. I figure if OFC approves, it must be
OK.
My brother inlaw actually moved his stove down to his cellar, to the
place where the stove had been, before the main house was built, until
his two were old enough to understand not to touch the stove which was
in a hearth. They then put a small table, with some decorations in the
hearth, it was really pretty to see. The children are older (8&7) and
now understand to stay away from the stove, so they just bought a
second stove for the hearth area in the main livingroom.
Lyn
Lyn
|