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19 September 2008
Posted in
Tilty Quest
As you know, Tilty Cups are not 100% leak proof BY DESIGN. This isn't a flaw, this is to make your baby's transition easier. Here is my proof. (I got to see my better design in action, it was so cool).
I am helping Bradyn to learn how to use a cup. So when I hand him the Tilty Cup, I put it to his mouth and slightly tilt. What happens is a little drop hits his lips or tongue and he then realizes it is for eating. He grabs it with his hands and holds it to his mouth.
I gave him a valved cup with handles, one of those can't shake a drop of liquid out of me cups. I held it to his mouth but since nothing came out, he just chewed on the end of it. Then he chewed on the arms and then the bottom and then the side.
It wasn't a cup to him at all. It was a chew toy. He enjoyed chewing on it since he has two bottom teeth and is getting a couple more. Just ask my wife about his teeth. He almost had to go cold turkey from breast milk yesterday after almost making her pass out. (Wait till she reads this!)
My point is if the cup is so good at keeping the fluid in, then just think of how hard they have to work to get it out. They end up sucking on a funky shaped nipple type thing super hard to drink. This is why I suppose the ADA said to buy no valve snap on lid sippy cups. Which brings us back to design. We designed it to be better in so many ways.
Yeah I don't like it when Bradyn turns the thing upside down and gets a couple of drops on himself or the table, but at that point he is looking for something to play with, not drink with. That's when I get out one of those chew toys.
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