Yes it does make it worth the cost. Cloth diapers are a disgusting hassle that you don't have to deal with when you have the disposable kind.
The benefits of using cloth diapers vs disposable ones are the money one saves by reusing the same diapers, the reduction of waste in landfills is also important.
If you're just starting out using organic cloth diapers, the start up cost can be expensive in comparison to using disposable diapers. However, since organic cloth diapers are reusable and can be washed, they are the cheaper option in the long run.
Because washing cloth diapers was a very unpleasant task.
Cloth diapers do not have any chemicals in them (unlike disposable ones), they are soft on the babies skin, recycleable, does not cause dryness or rashes.
gDiapers are cloth diapers and protective garments which use a biodegradable liner. This sets them apart from both traditional cloth diapers, which are unlined, and disposable diapers, in which the entirety is not typically biodegradable.
Yes -- the material is stretchy enough to work with either disposable or cloth diapers.
Babies wear "diapers" sometimes cloth, sometimes disposable.
Instead of using a disposable diaper like what most people use nowadays, you use a cloth diaper, which you wash and reuse. They're a lot better for your baby than a disposable diaper is actually. And they're a LOT cheaper.
Cloth diapers are more expensive but in the long run disposable diapers will usually cost more to you.Cloth diapers you only probably need to buy about 15 in a life time, but they are a pain to clean and change, and they leak more often than a disposable diaper. Also they can sometimes run your water bill really high depending on how you clean them, and a cloth diaper takes longer to change and must be changed quickly or the diaper will leak and smell. Disposable diapers can also leak sometimes but are less likely to. You can buy them in bulk for a cheap price too. They are easier to change and depending on the brand can hold in more waste for longer( like over night disposable diapers unlike cloth diapers because if your baby goes potty while sleeping, you are pretty much guaranteed a leak). I would recommend you buy disposable.
It depends on the type of diaper - there are disposable and reusable/washable/cloth swim diapers. As you can guess by the names you can reuse the reusable swim diapers - you need to wash it with hot water and dry it in the dryer or outside in the line. The disposable swim diapers are meant for a single usage only. Even if your child has not peed or pooed in it you should toss it because it will not contain the next time you use it - it won't fit snug again. This is the reason why I chose reusable swim diapers for my kids and I recommend them to everyone.
Although the initial cost of a cloth diaper versus a disposable diaper equates to the cloth diaper costing significantly more on a per diaper basis; in the long run cloth diapers would save you money. The cost savings associated with cloth diapers is a result of there ability to be reused over and over again by properly caring for and washing the diapers regularly where disposables are single use and must be thrown away after. Cloth diapers are also better for the environment as they are more biodegradable than disposables and don't use plastics in manufacturing.