Muslin Swaddle - English Garden
Roses, peonies, wildflowers — a Liberty-style ditsy floral.
47 x 47 inches. The size that holds together.
Hospital swaddles come out around 44 inches and that's exactly where the swaddle goes from snug to loose at 3 a.m. The three-inch difference is small on paper and load-bearing in practice. After about week three, you'll know which one you wish you'd been handed.
Material. Tanboocel muslin — viscose from bamboo and cotton, woven into an open-weave structure. Soft from the first wash, softer after the fifth. Breathes well enough that you can swaddle a newborn in summer without creating a hot pocket. Holds up to the wash cycle that comes with a baby in the first six months — three times a week, minimum, sometimes daily.
The print. Cream ground with a dense Liberty-style ditsy wildflower floral in peach, dusty blue, coral, olive green, and mauve.
One blanket, many jobs. A newborn swaddle is the first use. After the swaddle phase ends (8–16 weeks for most babies), the same blanket becomes a nursing cover, a stroller shade, a tummy-time mat, a burp cloth, a lightweight summer blanket on the playmat, a car-seat shade, a shoulder cover for a sleeping baby in a carrier. We've seen them used as photo backdrops, picnic blankets, and emergency bibs. The blanket lasts well past the swaddle window.
When to stop swaddling. The arms-in swaddle ends the moment the baby shows signs of rolling — usually 8–16 weeks. The AAP guidance is firm on this. Past that point, switch to a 0.5 TOG muslin sleep bag (warm nursery) or a 1.0 TOG TENCEL™ sleep bag (everyday nursery) with arms free.
Adjacent products. Once the swaddle phase ends, the natural next step is a 0.5 TOG Muslin Sleep Bag for warm nurseries or a 1.0 TOG TENCEL™ Sleep Bag for the everyday 69–75°F room.
Care. Machine wash cold, tumble dry low. The muslin softens with every wash for the first ten or so cycles, then stabilizes. Do not bleach. Do not iron printed areas.
Compliance. OEKO-TEX Standard 100 on the fabric, CPSC/CPSIA/ASTM on the garment, AAP safe-sleep guidance on the design. Loulou Lollipop is a Certified B Corporation — a third-party audit of how we treat people and the planet, not a self-claim.
Common questions
When should I stop swaddling my baby?
Stop the arms-in swaddle the moment the baby shows signs of rolling — usually 8–16 weeks. After that, switch to a 0.5 or 1.0 TOG sleep bag with arms free. The AAP's guidance is firm on this: a swaddled baby who rolls onto their stomach is at meaningfully higher risk.
What size swaddle blanket is best?
47x47 inches is the size that holds together. Hospital swaddles are usually 44x44 and that's where the swaddle goes from snug to loose at 3 a.m. The three-inch difference matters more than it sounds like it should.
Can I use a muslin swaddle as a nursing cover?
Yes. The same blanket works as a nursing cover, a stroller shade, a tummy-time mat, a lightweight summer blanket, and a burp cloth. Open-weave muslin breathes well enough that you're not creating a hot pocket while feeding.
Browse all baby swaddle blankets.
Free US shipping on orders over $65. 30-day returns on unworn, unwashed items.
Our Irresistibly Light & Airy Muslin
Oeko-Tex Certified & Chemical Free
Non-Toxic & Safe
Ultra-Soft & Gentle On Baby’s Skin
Why Parents Love This

Generously Sized & Multi-Purpose
Perfect for swaddling (measures 47” x 47”), but also doubles as a car seat cover or nursing cover

Stands Up to Daily Use
Soft enough for baby's skin, tough enough for every wash cycle.

Breathable for Every Season
Naturally breathable bamboo and cotton muslin keeps air flowing and regulates temperature — so baby stays comfortable, not overheated.

Gets Softer With Every Wash
Muslin only gets better over time — softer after every cycle, built to last through the whole baby stage.
Machine wash cold with like colours
Tumble dry on low heat
Use only non-chlorine bleach
Do not iron
Do not dry clean
Wash in a garment bag
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