As Baby builds sensory awareness (vision, hearing, touch, mouthing), these skills begin to integrate into movement.
Fine motor skills like grasping, hand-to-midline, rolling, and head control start developing around 3 months and continue through 8+ months.
Gross motor skills like crawling, standing, walking, running, and kicking develop later as strength and coordination grow.
Remember, every baby develops at their own pace, variation is completely normal.
Stacks of Circles Ring Stacker
Designed for babies sitting up unassisted, this stacker features a straight center post for frustration-free play at every stage.
As baby grows, they’ll begin to recognize size differences and can stack in order of size.
Built-in sensory elements such as textures, colors, sounds, and movement encourage exploration. Top rings are great for mouthing and chewing, especially during teething.
Stacking Fruit Cars
Three stackable cars, each offering a unique cause-and-effect experience for baby.
The orange car features a teethable top with beads and clicking wheels that activate sound when pushed.
The banana-shaped yellow car introduces pull-back and go motion, helping baby explore cause and effect through repetition.
The watermelon base car includes popping beads that move as the car rolls for another engaging cause-and-effect discovery.
Rainbow Ring Drop
A clear box with five textured rings, each with a crinkly fabric tail for sensory play.
Baby can drop rings in and pull them out repeatedly, building an understanding of force, repetition, and cause-and-effect. For baby, repetition like this means building a foundation for life long learning!
The box itself features multiple textures and visual distortions on each side, adding variety and encouraging exploration.
Light-Up Rainbow Reel
A versatile sensory toy that suctions to flat surfaces for play anywhere.
As baby learns to bat at objects (around 4-6 months), the soft, colorful bumps encourage interaction. Spinning the wheel activates lights to support eye tracking, visual development, and a sense of wonder!
Falling beads create gentle sounds, engaging hearing, while the soft bumps double as great teethers.