Baby Car Seats/Child safety car seats 4 colors

Red Square/BLUE/PINK/Grey Square

Important: When  sending payment please include the Color information in the  "Note to Seller" section of your PayPal payment.  If  this information is not included, your order will be delayed! 

Protect your lovely baby & child when they are in car. It used as safe harness.

Color: We have 4 colors,

and if you didn't leave a message note which color you want,

we will ship Pink color for you.

Thank you very much. 

Item Type:Child Car Safety Seats
Fixation Type:Five-Points
Material Type:Cotton
Seat style:Sitting
Install Style:Rear-Facing
Item Length50 cm
Item Width:32 cm
Item Weight:0.58 kg
Suitable1 Years - 6Years old (9KG-18KG


IT IS FOR THE AGE OF  1 YEARS TO 6 YEARS OLD & 9 -18 KG WEIGH BABY

 

Buying a first car seat

A car seat is one piece of equipment you really need before your baby is born, whether or not you own a car. If you are having your baby in hospital and are going home by car, you will need to put her in a seat. Hospital staff might want to check you have one. Even if this is the only car trip your baby makes, it is worth borrowing a car seat from friends or family, but only use a second-hand seat if you are certain of its history.
Choosing the right car seat for your baby's age and weight is very important. You must also make sure that it is properly installed. If a car seat doesn't seem to fit your car perfectly, or if it seems difficult to fasten in place, do not buy it. Some seats work better in some models of cars than others. Try before you buy. The seat should be held tightly by the seatbelt with very little sideways movement.

Practise putting the empty seat in and tightening up the seatbelt. If the seat moves around, it's not safe.

Car seat sizes

Car seat sizes can be confusing, because they are categorised in different ways. Some people talk about Group 0 and Group 0+ car seats, others refer to stage one or two. Shops generally refer to seats by groups, to try to avoid confusion. It's simpler and safer if you think in terms of choosing the right seat for your baby's weight, as our chart below shows. 
Weight rangeApproximate age rangeGroupStage
From birth to 10kg (22lb)Newborn to 9 months01
From birth to 13kg (29lb)Newborn to 5-18 months0+1
9kg to 18kg (20lb to 40lb)9 months to 4 years12
15kg to 25kg (33lb to 55lb)Up to 6 years23
22kg to 36kg (48lb to 79lb)Up to 12 years34

Infant carriers

If your baby weighs up to 13kg (29lb), she needs to be in a rear-facing seat. These are known as Group 0, up to 10kg (22lb), Group 0+, up to 13kg, or stage one car seats, but they are most easily remembered as infant carriers. Most infant carriers are classified as Group 0+.

This is a good option, because your baby travels facing the rear of the car for longer, giving her head and neck vital support. As long as the crown of your baby's head does not stick up above the top of the seat, she should stay facing backwards for as long as possible. See our article for more information on the best time to move your baby out of an infant carrier and into a forward-facing seat.

As small babies sleep so much, you can often move your baby in and out of the car while she is sleeping without waking her up. Infant carriers have a carrying handle to make this easier. They also usually come with little pillows known as head huggers, which make sure that your newborn baby's head doesn't wobble about as she travels in the car. You will need to use these for the first three months or so until your baby can hold her head up on her own.

Pros

Cons

Combination car seats

Combination car seats can be used in both directions. They start facing backwards, classified as Group 0+, up to about 13kg, and then convert to a forward-facing Group 1 seat, up to 18kg (40lb).

However, the latest advice to parents is that children should travel in rear-facing car seats until they are four. See our article on buying a Group 1 seat to find out why.

Group 1 seats are heavier than infant carriers and have no handles, so they stay in the car. If you're buying a combination car seat, it's important to try it before buying to make sure that it fits properly in both directions. Many parents prefer to buy two seats if they are having another baby, so that the next baby can use the newborn seat again and their toddler can use a Group 1 car seat. Always check the seat manufacturer?s advice about when to replace a seat, because some can degrade over time.

There is also a newer type of baby car seat, which can be used like an infant carrier, facing backward, or it can be adjusted to lie flat in a carrycot position across the car?s back seat. This means that your baby travels sideways. Your baby is held in place, not by a harness, as in a rear-facing infant carrier, but by a single broad strap across her chest. Carrycots occupy all of the back seat and use both outer seat belts to secure them.

Safety tip:
Rear-facing car seats should never be used on a front seat if there is an active airbag in the car. To make sure that your car seat is safe, have it checked by a professional. Call your local council's road safety team and ask to have your car seat checked or ask at car dealerships, which may do free checks. See our article about the law on fitting child seats.