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One Tiny Party vs AllThingsBaby Registry

Universal registry vs single-store — is there really a contest?

Published · By Trishna Ramdasan · AllThingsBaby reviewed independently

AllThingsBaby (allthingsbaby.in) is a small but dedicated Indian baby products store. They carry a curated selection of baby gear — strollers, car seats, feeding accessories, and nursery items — from a mix of international and Indian brands. If you've searched for baby registries in India, you might have come across their registry feature.

But AllThingsBaby's registry has a significant limitation shared by every single-store registry: it only works with their own products. Their catalogue is relatively small compared to marketplaces like Amazon or FirstCry, which means your registry options are quite limited.

One Tiny Party is a universal registry — add items from any website, including AllThingsBaby, and share one link with everyone. Here's the detailed comparison.

Head-to-Head Comparison

FeatureOne Tiny PartyAllThingsBaby
Add from any storeYes — any URLNo — their products only
Product rangeUnlimited — all storesSmall — limited catalogue
PriceFreeFree
India-nativeYesYes
Guest sign-up requiredNo — password onlyYes — account needed
Gift trackingYesBasic
Design qualityElegant, minimalBasic e-commerce
Ads & promotionsNoneStore promotions
PrivacyNo trackingStandard e-commerce

The Small Catalogue Problem

AllThingsBaby carries a focused selection of baby products. This is fine for browsing and shopping — sometimes a curated selection is better than endless options. But for a baby registry, a small catalogue creates real problems:

  • Missing categories — Your registry needs items across dozens of categories: feeding, bathing, clothing, nursery furniture, safety equipment, travel gear, toys, and more. No small store covers all of these well.
  • Limited price range — With a small catalogue, you can't offer your guests a range of price points. Some guests want to spend ₹500, others ₹5,000. A limited store might not have options for both.
  • No brand variety — You might want a Chicco bottle, a Mamaearth skincare set, and a LuvLap stroller. A single small store is unlikely to carry all the specific brands you prefer.
  • Availability issues — Small stores have smaller inventories. Items go out of stock more frequently, leaving gaps in your registry at the worst time.

When AllThingsBaby's Registry Makes Sense

In fairness, there are scenarios where AllThingsBaby's registry might work:

  • You love their specific curation — If AllThingsBaby has exactly the brands and products you want and you don't need anything outside their catalogue, the single-store experience is streamlined.
  • You want a very small registry — If you only plan to list 5-10 items and AllThingsBaby carries all of them, the simplicity of a single-store registry has some appeal.
  • You value their customer service — Smaller stores often provide more personalised service. If you have a relationship with AllThingsBaby, their registry support might be more hands-on than a self-service platform.

These are niche scenarios, though. For most parents building a comprehensive registry, a single small store simply doesn't have enough selection.

When One Tiny Party Is the Better Choice

One Tiny Party wins in almost every scenario because the fundamental value proposition is different: any store, any product, one registry.

  • You want variety — Add items from Amazon, Flipkart, FirstCry, AllThingsBaby, The Mom Store, and any other website. Your guests see one unified list.
  • You want price range flexibility — Mix ₹299 essentials from Amazon with ₹3,000 premium items from boutique stores. Every guest finds something in their budget.
  • You want a complete registry — A proper baby registry covers 30-50 items across many categories. Only a universal registry can handle that breadth without compromising.
  • You want no guest sign-ups — One Tiny Party uses password-only access. Your relatives view the registry instantly without creating accounts on yet another website.
  • You want beautiful design — One Tiny Party is designed to feel like an invitation, not a shopping cart. Hand-crafted typography, elegant layout, and no visual clutter.
  • You want gift tracking that works across stores — Mark items as purchased regardless of which store they came from. No more coordinating across multiple wishlists.

Why Universal Beats Single-Store Every Time

The pattern is clear across all single-store registries in India — whether it's AllThingsBaby, The Mom Store, or Amazon's registry. They all force you to limit your choices to one catalogue.

Indian parents don't shop from one store. They compare prices on Amazon and Flipkart. They find niche products on FirstCry. They discover beautiful handmade items from D2C Instagram brands. They buy furniture from local shops.

A baby registry should reflect how you actually shop — not force you into one store's limitations. That's the core argument for a universal registry like One Tiny Party.

The Bottom Line

AllThingsBaby is a decent small baby store with a basic registry feature. But unless their specific catalogue covers everything you need (unlikely for a comprehensive registry), you'll hit limitations quickly.

One Tiny Party is the better choice for almost every Indian parent. It's universal (any store), free, private, requires no guest sign-ups, and designed to look beautiful. You can still include AllThingsBaby products — just paste the URL and they appear alongside everything else on your list.

Every store. One beautiful registry.

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