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The Taf Toys Bunny Sorting Stacking Pegs is an interactive educational toy designed for toddlers aged 18-36 months. It promotes fine motor skills, color recognition, and counting through engaging play. Featuring 15 bunny pegs and a beautifully illustrated box, this safe and durable toy is perfect for nurturing creativity and cognitive development in young children.
Material Type | Plastic |
Color | Mehrfarbig |
Subject Character | Bunny |
Theme | Colourful |
Item Weight | 15.2 ounces |
Item Dimensions | 11.7 x 3.4 x 4.5 inches |
Size | Medium |
Operation Mode | Manual |
Educational Objective | color recognition |
Power Source | manual |
Number of Players | 1 |
M**E
Missing pieces and flimsy
Ultimately kept because it was a last minute add for Easter baskets and needed to fill space but it’s super thin cardboard and we received wrong color clips (only one red, 4 blue?). Would not recommend, better options available.
L**R
Learning Toys are the Best
This is such a darling little set! I wanted it as a gift for my sister, who teaches at a Montessori school, 12-18 month kids. She loves it so much, and I love to help her out with little educational toys she can use for a long time. This sweet set features soft, beautiful colors; darling little bunnies; a nicely painted box where the bunnies can be stored between uses; and a design that offers several ways for the kids to learn new things, while actually playing and having fun. That's the definition of a good toy, in my opinion. The little plastic bunny heads are designed to be clasped and pinched to open them at the bottom (think bag-clip, like those used in the pantry to close bags of chips, etc.). They're not really tight, but just right for tiny hands to learn those fine motor skills. The little bunny heads are pinched open, then slide over the sides of the painted box, to complete the picture of some little bunnies on the side of the box. The other side of the box features color-matching, counting, and number characters. For such a small toy, there is a lot of opportunity for learning. The toy is recommended for 18-month-olds+. But my sister says even some of her 12-month-olds are learning to clasp and pinch open things. Even the tiny ones who don't quite get the concept will love the colors, and having an adult help them complete the bunnies. I think it's a lovely toy at a reasonable price.
Q**L
Great toy for learning
This is a very nice Montessori toy for kids. They can learn to sort and clip items by colors. It also helps them with their fine motor skills as they aim to clip the little colored bunnies on the correct colored squares. Overall a decent toy for kids to learn with.
M**S
No force required to move pegs
For this to be a learning activity for the older kids, there needs to be resistance to build finger strength. These pegs just slot on to the box so it's too easy. It's a nice idea.
N**S
Cute, beneficial toddler set
This fun set includes a long, narrow cardboard box meant to help reinforce learning about colors and counting, but my favorite part about the product is the gentle, bunny-shaped clips. The box can store the clips, and it can provide a handy place to attach the clips, assigning them to a particular color, or building them up to a specific number, however I don't love the design. It has an attached, plastic topper which divides it into five sections, but the divider does not actually go down into the box, which is just all one, long open space. Once the bunnies go into any slot, they're all mixed in together, rather than being sorted, and the dividing bars at the top make fishing (or dumping) the clips back out more awkward than it should be.The bunnies, on the other hand, are great. Even twelve- and eighteen-month-old babies can be attracted to and interested in engaging with clips, and doing so is good for working on their understanding of cause and effect, and is a fantastic way to develop coordination, dexterity, and strength in their fingers and hands. If you already have clothespins or clips for cereal or chip bags, you might be tempted to let your little one play with those, but here is why I was glad to have these, instead.--Standard household clips tend to be made of small parts, especially the metal spring, and often a little fridge magnet. If anything becomes separated, this could easily create a choking hazard.--The spring could also scratch tiny fingers, even without the clip coming apart.--The mechanism is often too stiff for very young hands, and too difficult for them to operate.--They usually close quite suddenly and tightly, too, which could lead to painful pinches to your baby's fingertips as they play and explore.But the bunny clips address all these concerns. Each clip is all in one piece, so there are no discrete components which can separate, and the front and back are joined, not by a metal spring, but by a bar of plastic. Nothing on these clips can scratch, and they close much less forcefully, making them easier to pinch open and closed. Since the business end closes lightly or remains ever so slightly ajar, there's no possibility of these clips nipping your baby's skin as they play. For these reasons, even if you would let a pre-k child use regular clips, I really think these are better for very little ones, and I recommend them to you.The toddler I watch has been having lots of fun with the set, so you have their recommendation, too. Sometimes I attach the bunnies to the edges or bars on the box, and they take them off and drop them in. Other times I clip the bunnies to the open fronts of their hoodie, or the cuff of their sleeve, or a wrinkle of their clothing. We race to see whether I can put them on, or they can take them off, faster. They think it's funny when I put a clip on their toes or fingers (Again, there's no force in these; the clips have a very gentle grip.), and will stick their foot in the air over and over, wanting to be 'clipped' so they can 'de-clip,' so to speak. At about a year and half, this little one is not simply ripping them off, but squeezing the bunny ears in order to work the clip properly. Since they're capable of this much, it may not be long before they figure out how to pinch them open in order to apply them to my finger or their clothing or whatever it may be.5 stars for the bunny clips2.5 for the boxI'll give four stars over all because I really do think these clips are perfect for older babies and young toddlers.
R**S
cute matching game
Taf bunny matching tweezer toy is cute. The box says 18 months+ for appropriate age. The sorting box itself is reinforced cardboard with a plastic rim and divider tops. It seems pretty durable. The tweeze clips are cute. There are 5 purple, 4 blue, 3 green, 2 yellow and 1 red. The clips open pretty easily and I don't feel like a small child would pinch themselves with this. The clips fit loosely on the box rim. One side of the box is for matching color with the rabbit by clipping his head on or dropping it in the slot for that color. I did note that there are no dividers inside the box which erases a child's sorting work when they drop it in and makes retrieval difficult without dumping them all out. The other side of the sorting box has the challenge of counting with the same kind of task. The child can clip 5 stacking bunnies on the rim or drop 5 in for purple. Kids can also count the 5 strawberries and learn numeral/quantity match as well as grouping and sorting. As a Pre-K teacher I can see plenty of learning opportunity here. Fine motor muscle strengthening with the clips, hand/eye coordination, classifying, counting, matching, numerals, colors, patterns, sorting, 1:1 correspondence, numeral/quantity match, patterning, color shades etc... The pieces fit inside for storage and the toy seems durable for the classroom. If there were walls in this box to separate all a student's hard work and learning, this toy would be just right! Besides that it will still be useful as a learning tool in my class.
T**A
Great educational tool with supervision
The bunny stack is an adorable and versatile educational toy. It is a great steam toy. However, it can be difficult for younger ones to manipulate the bunnies on their own, making it a frustrating experience for them. That is why I gave it only 4 stars. However, for toddlers 24 months and up, it's a great toy that I would recommend.
E**
Prijs kwaliteit slaagt het erg tegen
De wasknijpers zijn heel leuk en goede kwaliteit maar de doos stelt heel weinig voor en is rap beschadigd en niet functioneel. Wel leuk speelgoed maar veel te duurt voor wat je krijgt
M**E
Petit jeu éducatif
C'est un petit jeu simple pour apprendre à manipuler des pinces, découvrir les couleurs et compter jusqu'à 5.Les pinces sont bien faites, on ne peut pas se pincer fort les doigts ni se faire mal avec.Par contre ça n'a pas trop intéressé ma fille (de 26 mois) malheureusement... on reessaiera plus tard pour apprendre les chiffres et compter.Les compartiments ne sont pas séparés; toutes les pinces se retrouvent ensemble dans la boîte.
M**E
Plutôt sympa
Ce petit jeu est très sympa pour les petits et surtout évolutif !Complètement adapté aux petites mains son utilisation est simple.Les couleurs sont jolies et le principe top.Je recommande
M**S
Mignon mais pas pratique
En temps normal, j'aime beaucoup la marque TAF toys. Mais là, je suis plutôt mitigée. On a une boite avec au recto des lapins aux habits de couleurs différentes et au verso des chiffres et un nombre équivalent de fruits. L'idée c'est que l'enfant associe au recto les lapins aux pinces de la même couleur. Et quand l'enfant est plus grand, il peut associer au verso le nombre de pinces au nombre de fruits.Les pinces permettent de travailler la psychomotricité fine. C'est surtout utile pour les enfants qui ont du mal avec ça (par exemple, la maitresse de ma fille m'avait suggéré de la faire jouer avec des pinces à linge pour lui faire travailler sa psychomotricité fine). Mais c'est un jeu vraiment limité.Je trouve que la boite n'est pas du tout adaptée au jeu. Elle n'est pas réellement compartimentée (en fait, ce sont juste des barres sur le dessus de la boite et pas des parois qui cloisonnent les espaces). Donc les pinces tombent au fond et il est difficile de les en sortir pour un enfant, même avec des petites mains.Pour un jeu destiné à des enfants de 18 mois, je suis étonnée qu'on ai mis des couleurs aussi peu contrastées. Il n'y a pas de rouge, de blanc ou de noir. Par contre, on a du violet. Ce n'est pas très logique. En plus, les couleurs des lapins ne correspond pas à celui des légumes présentés et ne correspond même pas aux couleurs de la boite (on a des couleurs beaucoup plus vives ou foncées pour les lapins que sur la boite).J'aime les pinces, mais c'est tout. La boite n'a aucun intérêt et a été mal pensée.
H**I
Trop mimi et adapté aux petites mains
Ce jeu est vraiment mignon.L’enfant doit attacher des pinces lapin sur la boîte de jeu, les pinces vont de 1 à 5 donc cela permet de travailler la numération ainsi que les couleurs.Les pinces sont de bonne taille, adapté aux mains d’enfants.Bonne qualité, je recommande 👍🏻
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