Puppettos A Day in Fantasyland Finger Puppets
From Manhattan Toy
Item # 114570 MA
- Price:
- $21.95 $21.95
- Recommended Age:
- 3 years and up
- Availability:
-
In stock (guaranteed)
In stock Guarantee
Our fulfillment rate is 99.9%. If you are able to place an item in your shopping cart that means that the item is available for immediate shipment. If you ever have to wait for an item to come back in stock to fulfill your order, when it does come back in stock we will not charge you for the item – it’s FREE!
- Available for pre-order
- Temporarily out of stock
- Usually ships:
- within 24 hours
Description
With this unique collection of Puppettos A Day in Fantasyland Finger Puppets from Manhattan Toy, kids can create the most unique of fairy tales! These cute Puppettos A Day in Fantasyland Finger Puppets will keep kids – and their fingers – busy with fun, entertaining imaginative play! Included in the Puppettos A Day in Fantasyland Finger Puppets set is 4 fun colorful finger puppets: an enchanting fairy, a beautiful mermaid, a 2 different princess characters! And to keep performances creative, the Puppettos A Day in Fantasyland Finger Puppets set includes a colorful, beautifully illustrated box that begins the fairy tale story, but encourages kids to create their own endings! Finger puppets measures 3” tall.
Developmental Benefits
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Physical
PhysicalBenefits
Play that encourages learning through bodily sensations and movement. Toys of this category help children learn through activities that challenge their hand-eye coordination and improve both their gross and fine motor skills. Children that learn best through physical play are often athletic and enjoy sports, so the optimal toys for this developmental benefit of play focus on manipulating objects, building, dancing, and role-playing or other forms of make believe that involve motion, action, and the working of big and small muscles. These kids are on the move, and they need toys that will keep up with them!
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Logical
LogicalBenefits
Play that focuses on reasoning and sequencing. This benefit of play will improve children's problem solving abilities, concentrating on numbers and patterns, logic and sequencing. Children with logical interests desire to see processes and to experiment with the world, searching for patterns and sequences in everything they do and see. Toys that are ideal for this developmental benefit of play are puzzles, logic games, arithmetic problems, and strategy games - everything that will help children focus on logic and sequence. These mathematical minds won't settle for a simple 2+2 game!
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Spatial
SpatialBenefits
Play that is visual in nature - full of color, creativity, and images. Learning takes place in a world of images and pictures, as this benefit of play encourages a child's artistic side. These toys open up the visual environment, providing children another way to learn through the creation of pictures, graphs, diagrams, or models. This developmental benefit will improve children's observation skills and stimulate an active imagination. Whether creating a masterpiece by paint, building the next great architectural wonder, or solving that impossible maze, this benefit of play adds the perfect visual dimension to a child's learning environment - look out Picasso!
Types of Play
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Dramatic
Dramatic Play
Play that involves pretend and make believe, or whatever the imagination dreams. Have you ever found a child in your clothes? Carrying your briefcase? Wearing your old uniform? What seems commonplace to you opens a whole new world of possibilities to a child. Dramatic play can include: * Simple role playing * Using props to create a "new" environment * Creating scenes or situations with dolls and puppets Children love role-playing and exploring worlds outside of their everyday, creating new and fun situations with every costume and prop. Imagine what they think you do at work!
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Manipulative
Manipulative Play
Play that involves hand-eye coordination and motor skills. Children need the opportunity to work on finer skills that involve a little more control and direction. Manipulative play develops the sense of coordination, challenging their little fingers to follow the lines or use their tools properly. Some examples of manipulative play are: * Coloring, especially in a defined area * Paper crafts and art involving moving parts that need to be "put together" * Using a safe and simple tool kit to help with tasks around the house Cutting out a sunshine for the window or painting within the lines — all these activities are the perfect exercise for this type of play.

