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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Educational Toys, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 12 of 12
1. Steve Light's Storyboxes - Toys for young storytellers

If you spend any time watching young children playing with their toys, you will soon see that many of them make up stories, acting out their tales and using different voices for their characters. Steve Light is a born storyteller, and he has created some beautiful Story boxes that children and their grownups can use to explore classic fairy tales. So far he has created Story boxes for Hansel and Gretel (a German fairy tale), Rapunzel (another German fairy tale), The girl who Loved Danger (an African story), and Little one Inch (a Japanese story.)

I am lucky enough to have received one of the Story boxes to take a look at and I am charmed by it. My Rapunzel box is a nice wooden box that has a top that slides open. When I opened the box, I discovered that the box has a scene painted into the bottom, which serves as a backdrop for the story. There are three  characters, three turnips, a pair of scissors, a ladder, and a tower, all of which are made of hand painted wood. There is also a long yellow yarn braid that serves as Rapunzel's long hair.

I had a lot of fun trying out the box and plan on taking it to the elementary school where I volunteer as a reading helper. The booklet that comes with the book contains the story of Rapunzel, which adults and children can use and embellish as they wish.

Wanting to know how he came up with the idea of his Storyboxes, I asked Steve to tell me about them. This is what he told me:

I have always loved to draw and make things. I love writing and illustrating stories in my children’s books, whether it is the sounds a truck or train makes, or how a giant makes all the wrapping paper for Santa. Even when making a piece of fine art, the picture has to have a story or it will not work for me as an artist. I also have the great fortune to be a Pre-K teacher for a class of 4 and 5 year olds. I tell stories to the class almost everyday. At one point I was just a storyteller for a school and visited 10 classrooms sharing different stories with each of them. One class loved the story of Hansel and Gretel and would ask me to tell it over and over again.
As an illustrator and “maker of things,” I one day saw two pieces of wood in my workshop that were the same size and so I decided to carve Hansel and Gretel. I brought the two tiny figures to the class and told the story acting it out with the small wooden characters I had carved and painted. After I finished the story, the children asked, “Where is the witch, and the cottage, and the father?” I went home that night and carved all the other characters and props I needed for the story. I found a wooden box to put them in and painted a “title” on the box like a cover to a story book and storyboxes were born!
I went on to making a total of 13 boxes, telling them to children in schools, libraries and museums everywhere. Guidcraft approached me and asked to recreate the storyboxes so other teachers, parents and kids could use them to tell stories. I was excited to work with them because I had used their products in my classroom for years and was aware of the quality that they put into everything they make. Guidecraft made casts from each of my hand carved figures so they look exactly like the figures and props that I use.
Storytelling is such a great thing to share with a child. For my storyboxes to be in other classrooms where other teachers can make them their own and add their own ideas to them is what the oral tradition of storytelling is all about. When I tell a storybox in my classroom, I see my pupils adding narratives to their block play and making their own storyboxes out of paper. Telling a story to a child shares that love that leads to them wanting to read and write. I am so thrilled to be able to share my passion for storytelling with even more children now that my storyboxes will be available. There is an old proverb that says: People need stories more than bread, stories show them how to live and why.

Here is a video showing Steve Light using his Rapunzel Story box to tell the story to a classroom of young children.





Perfect for home and classroom, each Story box features characters, props, and settings cast from Light’s hand-carved originals, along with a booklet containing his original retelling of the story. In addition to the main characters, each Story box contains unique elements:
  - Hansel and Gretel includes a bag of “breadcrumbs,” witch’s house, cauldron, and recipe book
  - Kids can build the tower and thread Rapunzel’s long, braided hair out the window
  - Little One Inch features a beautifully-detailed Big Fish and colorful Oni Monster
  - The Girl Who Loved Danger features a brilliantly-patterned Ancestor Bird and fabric, hand-puppet Lake Monster
Light’s appealing art and vivid imagination also grace his board book, Trains Go (Chronicle), which follows the popular Trucks Go. “Each of Light’s trains has a distinct personality,” writes Publishers Weekly, “and locomotive lovers will clang, chug, and puff along with them as they make their way along the tracks.”
Steve Light is the author and illustrator of many children’s books. His design work can be found in the Smithsonian Cooper Hewitt Museum, and his corporate clients have included AT&T, Sony Films, Absolut Vodka, United Airlines, and the New York Times Book Review. Light lives in New York City.

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2. Rosie Flo's Fashion Show Pop-up Coloring Runway Set - Review and Giveaway


Today you're cordially invited to my daughter's virtual coloring fashion show, a glitzy extravaganza showcasing the new Rosie Flo's Fashion Show Pop-up Coloring Runway Set. My daughter has worked hard and long to ready her fabulous models and spectators for the show.

Rosie Flo's Fashion Show is a box gift set published by Chronicle Books that contains a ready-to-assemble paper theater and catwalk along with 18 paper models, 8 front-row spectators and a little poodle for kids to color and personalize. There are also pop-up chairs for the front-row spectators, little invitations to pass out and a paper camera to set up at the show. Instead of designing dresses, kids get to complete the character line drawings, a sort of "filling-in-a-person" drawing activity. Like all Rosie Flo products many line drawing dresses are ready for a creative mind to take over and add heads, faces, legs, arms and all the extra flourishes. Kids get creative by making up their own characters to fit the costumes.

The pop-up theater is impressively detailed, both inside and out. Models "get-ready" at the outside back of the theater in a dressing room and then enter through the doors onto the catwalk. No glue or scissors is required and the theater itself isn't too hard to assemble though smaller kids will probably need some assistance. According to the outside of the box, this set is recommended for ages six and up but with parental help I imagine younger kids would also enjoy coloring and creating the models.

My artsy daughter has already spent several hours drawing and coloring the models and spectators in her set and still has several more models to color. I asked what she likes most about this product and she replied that, "It is better than a coloring book because when you are done coloring you can play with it. It is hard work but a lot of fun because you get to draw people."

Models walking the catwalk.


A variety of spectators watch the fashion show.


As a parent I really like that this set challenges young artists by helping them practice

15 Comments on Rosie Flo's Fashion Show Pop-up Coloring Runway Set - Review and Giveaway, last added: 4/12/2012
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3. Wordless Wednesday - Book Train Tunnel




No need to buy a train tunnel when you have stacks of books readily available in your home! Choo! Choo!


Find more of this week's Wordless Wednesday (or Wordful) posts at 5 Minutes for Mom.

6 Comments on Wordless Wednesday - Book Train Tunnel, last added: 4/1/2011
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4. Molding Farm Animals with the Moon Dough Barn - Product Review



Exploration through tactile play is an important part of childhood. My kids especially love it when I bring out the play dough. They roll and shape it into interesting forms and like the way it feels when they squish and knead it between their fingers. Playing with dough improves motor skills and encourages creativity.

Recently, thanks to an opportunity provided by Team Mom, we had the chance to try a new kind of moldable dough called Moon Dough. It is a very lightweight, dry and crumbly dough that easily compresses into shapes. And, according to the manufacturer, it never dries out, is hypo-allergenic, and is wheat-free.

We received the Moon Dough Barn product to test and review. The large plastic barn is actually a crank driven toy that molds the dough into four different animal shapes: cow, sheep, horse or chicken. The barn requires some minor assembly before kids can play with it.

Besides the main barn pieces, the set comes with the following items:
3 packages of Colored Moon Dough, Removable Barn Silo, Fence Mold, Hale Bale Mold, Small Play Mat, Instruction Guide

The lightweight dough is a very different product to work with than your typical play dough and feels really interesting to squish and compress. My kids had fun trying to form the Moon Dough into balls, placing it into the hay and bale molds and liked crumbling it into bits. They also really, really enjoyed pressing the dough into the top compartment of the barn and turning the crank to create the various animals one by one. Oftentimes they were in such a hurry to make an animal that they didn't put enough dough into the mold compartment and didn't fully compress it before cranking so they would end up with half-formed animals.

This is a fairly messy activity so I decided to let the kids play with the dough outside to simplify clean up. The dough does end up everywhere because it is so lightweight and it tracks easily. I think that adult supervision is necessary for kids who use this product. Care needs to be taken if you don't want the different dough colors to mix. In my opinion the play mat is a little on the small size (the manufacturer suggests covering the play surface with a plastic sheet or disposable table cloth). If my kids played with in indoors, I think I'd invest in a shallow tub to help contain the play.


1 Comments on Molding Farm Animals with the Moon Dough Barn - Product Review, last added: 8/28/2010
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5. "Get Ready For Kindergarten Month" with Dinosaur Train - GIVEAWAY

We're nearly finished filling my daughter's backpack with all the supplies she'll need for kindergarten. (The last item we need to find is a pack of feathers. Wonder what they'll use that for?) For the most part, I'm confident she's prepared. She can write her name, knows all her letters and numbers, and is just starting to read on her own.

Choo! Choo! Chomp! Even though I coordinate our school's science fair, science is a subject that we haven't spent a lot of time on yet at home. However, my daughter has learned a few things through watching shows like The Jim Henson Company's Dinosaur Train on PBS. The show encourages basic scientific thinking and skills as well as discussing various dinosaurs, life science, natural history and paleontology. Both my kids like watching Buddy the Tyrannosaurus Rex travel on the dinosaur train with his adoptive Pteranodon family. Triassic, Jurassic and Cretaceous - I can barely say those words but thanks to the show my children can easily recite them along with spouting out other interesting dinosaur facts.

The PBS website also contains a lot of wonderful content useful in helping to prepare pre-schoolers for school. Several fun scientific activities can be found on the DINOSAUR TRAIN website for parents and teachers http://www.pbs.org/parents/dinosaurtrain/activities/ or http://www.pbs.org/teachers/dinosaurtrain/lessonplans/. Here are a few but make sure to click on the links above for more:



Several new DINOSAUR TRAIN themed products are hitting the shelves this fall, including a few children's books! Here is a preview of a few of the new items available for purchase at major retailers (product descriptions from publishers/manufacturers):

Books:

I Am a T. Rex! (DINOSAUR TRAIN) -
Buddy has spent his whole life in a pteranodon nest

59 Comments on "Get Ready For Kindergarten Month" with Dinosaur Train - GIVEAWAY, last added: 8/22/2010
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6. Backyard Safari Outfitters - Field Gear Review


My husband hasn't had the chance to mow our lawn for over a week. We were gone for several days and it has been rainy and sticky out this week so the lawn looks like a jungle. That's OK though, because it gave the kids a chance to really try out their new Backyard Safari Outfitters gear and pretend they were wading through the bush on a hot and humid day. Kids need the time and freedom to check out their surroundings and there's a whole lot to look at right in the backyard.

The Backyard Safari Outfitters provides nature gear for young children that helps them engage in pretend play, explore the outdoors and connect with the natural world. Kids are naturally curious about the world so it doesn't take much coaxing to get them outside. However, it makes it a little more fun to have some fun exploration gear to check out all those rocks, ponds, weeds and bugs.

Thanks to Team Mom, we had the chance to try out three different products from the Backyard Safari Outfitters line: Essential Field Gear Cargo Vest, Bug Vacuum, and Land & Water Mega View Periscope.

My daughter loves playing dress-up so the first thing she wanted to try out was the Cargo Vest. We have a lot of princess outfits but our dress up box is lacking explorer gear, so we were happy to add this one to the mix. The vest is a little too big for my toddler son (not surprising considering it is marked 5 ages and up). It fits my daughter fairly well and includes numerous pockets, zippers, snaps and D-rings. She feels like a real explorer wearing it and can even manage the zipper herself. We don't own any safari hats, so my daughter thought that her pink tea hat would add a little pizzazz and brighten up the khaki gear.

The idea of a Bug Vacuum appeals to my daughter but the thought of actually getting near enough to a bug is another story. I'm hoping my little guy will start liking bugs soon and take over the bug vacuum duties, but right now I'm the only family member that has actually captured a bug. That said, I hope that my kids grow up appreciating nature and learning how to carefully inspect without disturbing and destroying. The bug vacuum seems gentle enough. We had a small moth inside our home the other day, and I carefully placed the

0 Comments on Backyard Safari Outfitters - Field Gear Review as of 1/1/1900
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7. Kaskey Kids Website and "Baseball Guys" Mini Pack Giveaway


The Parks and Recreation Department of our city offers several summer programs for kids. I'm planning to sign my daughter up for a few of them including swimming and t-ball. I played t-ball as a child and learned a lot about the fundamentals of baseball by participating. As I grew older, my love of baseball also grew. My parents took my brother and I to a Brewers major league game when we were in grade school, and I remember my excitement. Some of the more famous Brewers players were on the team including Robin Yount and Paul Molitor. When I reached high school, I enjoyed playing on the girl's softball team. Spring and summer would just not be the same without baseball.

Kaskey Kids is a company that produces sport action figures. Last fall I had the chance to review the Kaskey Kids Baseball Guys toy action figure set. (Click link to read my full review.) Their baseball action figure sets offer a wonderful way to explain the basics of baseball, and we're planning to use the set to prepare my daughter for her t-ball season. We wouldn't want her running the wrong way around the bases during her first game! Additionally, I'm hoping my son will love playing with the baseball guys we received last year while he watches his sister play ball this summer.

The Kaskey Kids recently updated the Kid's Corner part of their website. The website now has a few fun online games to play. I tried out the Baseball Homerun Champion game. It's easy enough for kids to play, but adults will also find it a little challenging to see how long they can manage to continue play. I ended up with a score of 38560 my first time so you'll have to see if you can beat it.

Fans can also upload their own photos that include a Kaskey Kids product on the Fans Photos portion of the website. When the photo receives 100 views it reaches "All Star" status. My favorite pictures are the ones that show the figures used as cake or party decorations. If kids need a few suggestions on ways to play with their action figures they can check out the Ways to Play section.

6 Comments on Kaskey Kids Website and "Baseball Guys" Mini Pack Giveaway, last added: 4/23/2010
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8. Fill up the Easter Basket with these gifts for children

Obviously eggs, books and a little candy belong in all Easter baskets. But, the Easter Bunny often includes small toys and gifts in the kids' Easter baskets, too. Here are some of our favorite smallish toys that would work perfectly as gifts on Easter day.

Resurrection Eggs - Last year I purchased a set of these for my children so that I could more easily explain the story of Jesus' death and resurrection. By the time Easter arrived, my daughter was able to tell the story herself and understood the real meaning of Easter. ($12.99)

International Playthings Hide'N Squeak Eggs - One of our friends has a set of these eggs. Always a hit at playgroup because they are appropriate for ages 12 months and up - all the kids love to take them apart and try to match them back together. Plus, it's hard to beat the price. ($9.55)

Calico Critters Family - Really, any of the Calico Critter products make ideal Easter gifts, but I really do like the details and tips of the ears on the Hopscotch bunny family. My daughter has the Dalmation Dog Family and she acts out all sorts of imaginary scenarios using them. ($19.99)

Littlest Pet Shop - We resisted buying these tiny toys for quite some time but then my daughter had a birthday party with her friends and received several as gifts. She loves playing with them, but I still think the animals look a little strange!

2 Comments on Fill up the Easter Basket with these gifts for children, last added: 3/22/2010
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9. Toy Industry Association Websites: ToyInfo.org & ToyAwards.org

With so many toys on the shelves, it is hard to know which toys are the best ones for your kids. Toy safety remains a main concern for many parents, grandparents and other consumers when purchasing toys.

The Toy Industry Association's (TIA) special website www.ToyInfo.org provides consumers with detailed information on toy safety and toy buying tips. The one-stop resource includes safety tips, videos, information on the benefits of playtime, play guides, toy trends, toy suggestions and discussion boards and recall update information. Specifically designed for parents and consumers, the helpful website helps ensure safe and fun play in the home.

I found a number of helpful resources on the website. The Links/Resources section is my favorite area. This is the first time I've seen links to all the toy related websites that mention safety and toy awards (Dr. Toy, Parents’ Choice, Oppenheim and more). The related play publications list includes several informative pdf documents. I also enjoyed the videos featuring discussions with The Moms of Toy Safety. The Toy Safety Tips page offers reminders on what to look for when purchasing toys this holiday season.

America Loves TOTY 2010The Toy Industry Association also just launched a new website for consumers that lists the best toys of this year, selected by toy industry experts. The website, www.toyawards.org, shows the top toys that have been nominated for the 2010 Toy of the Year Awards (TOTY). (The TOTY winners will be announced on Saturday, February 13, 2010.) There's even a downloadable pdf holiday toy shopping list.

Those that visit toyawards.org can vote for their favorite toys and also enter to win a prize package. I entered to win all the toys in the Outdoor Toy of the Year category, valued at $639.94! For more details, visit TOY INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION’S "AMERICA LOVES TOTY 2010" SWEEPSTAKES official rules. The promotion ends 1/12/2010.

Thanks to TIA and Team Mom for this review opportunity and for the chance to win one of three packages of toys and games. (View my full disclosure statement for more information about my reviews.)

0 Comments on Toy Industry Association Websites: ToyInfo.org & ToyAwards.org as of 1/1/1900
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10. K'NEX Building Sets Product Review & Make a K'NEXion Contest

I'm a huge advocate of open-ended toys, the kind of toys that encourage imagination and allow children to make their own creations with no right or wrong solutions. When children think for themselves they gain valuable life skills and also feel a sense of accomplishment. Building blocks and construction toys are classic examples of open-ended toys. Building activities help develop motor skills, strengthen spacial awareness and encourage problem solving.

The K'NEX brand of construction toys foster open-ended play. Kids can play with the sets for hours on end and construct in endless ways. Thanks to Team Mom and K'NEX we recently had the chance to try out two different K'NEX products.

My children were very excited to receive the Police Station Building Set from the K'NEX Sesame Street Neighborhood Collection Line. The set gives children the opportunity to recreate and build their own version of a Sesame Street police station complete with a stop-light and stop sign and even includes two buildable characters, Elmo and policeman Ernie. The set is recommended for ages 2-5.

Directions are supplied for the police station depicted on the cover, but my kids prefer to free build and pretend play with the two characters. My toddler son especially enjoys the two windows that open and close. My toddler son can also put two blocks together and disassemble the station. He really enjoyed playing and pretending together with Mommy and his big sister. My preschool daughter really likes the characters and making up pretend situations and conversations. The chunky, larger sized blocks work with other brands like DUPLO and Mega Bloks so my kids often build larger creations and add to their police station using other block sets that we already own.

The complete Kid K'NEX Sesame Street Neighborhood Collection line includes 4 separate sets: Ice Cream Truck Building Set, Police Car Building Set, 1-2-3 Brownstone Building Set and Police Station Building Set.




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11. Kaskey Kids "Sports Guys" Action Figures - Review and Giveaway


The 105th World Series begins tonight with the New York Yankees hosting the reigning champion from last year, the Philadelphia Phillies. We haven't watched much baseball after losing interest earlier in the season after the Milwaukee Brewers started performing poorly. But we'll watch some of the World Series play, especially tonight's game because former Brewer CC Sabathia starts on the mound for the Yankees.

A while back Kaskey Kids sent us a set of baseball sports action figures called Baseball Guys. Today we took the Baseball Guys out of their box and set them up in preparation for a pretend play World Series game. The red and blue uniformed players work perfectly for the 2009 World Series. Plus, the set has made it easier to explain some baseball basics to our preschooler and has increased her interest in baseball. Who knows, she might even watch an inning or two tonight!

The Baseball Guys set encourages imaginative play. Just like those classic army men or the cowboy sets, the "Sports Guys" action figures are made of hard plastic. Each figure has a wide enough base so it stands up without falling over. The players are amazingly realistic and detailed with painted uniforms. Each player even has it's own separate number on the back of it's uniform. The figures are approximately 2-3/4" tall. The Baseball Guys set has won an iParenting Media Award and Creative Child Magazine Preferred Choice Award.

The Baseball Guys set comes with 2 baseball teams (red and blue) and includes 30 pieces total:

• 2 Batters
• 6 Base Runners
• 14 Fielders
• 2 Pitchers
• 2 Catchers
• A scoreboard
• An umpire
• Green felt playing field (28" x 28")
• Instructions and Playbook

There aren't any actual rules that accompany the set. The instructions and playbook only provides a simplified explanation of the game of baseball. Instead, kids are encouraged to make up their own games and play freely with the figures without rules or guidelines. However, if kids need a few suggestions, the Kaskey Kids Website Kid's Corner includes a Ways to Play section. I think the baseball dice game sounds like fun. The website also shows images of the figures used as cake or party decorations. My favorite picture though is the Halloween costume of the little boy dressed as a football field.

My daughter likes to set up her own games on the felt field. She also likes to count all the figures and line them up in a straight line. She especially enjoys playing with the set if Daddy joins in and pretends along with her. Unfortunately sometimes her toddler brother wants in on the action as well. His way of playing involves destruction by scattering all the players over the floor and running off with the field.


The Kaskey Kids line of toys includes other sports besides baseball:
Football Guys, College Football, Hockey Guys, Soccer Guys and Girls, and Mini Packs.

My husband is a huge football fan and has his eye on the Football Guys: Green vs. Black so that he can set up his own Packer game. There's no Wisconsin team yet in the College line, but maybe in a few years the company will offer more teams. Sports directors and coaches have used the sports figures as training tools for their teams. Although girls can play with any of the sets, the Soccer Girls is marketed specifically towards girls and features ethnically diverse female players in pink and blue uniforms.

The sets make great gifts for both adults and children. Consider one for your sport's enthusiast this upcoming holiday season! Use the promo code "GoGuys" for a 10% discount at the Kaskey Kids web site. (From 11/1/09 until 1/1/10, use the code "Holiday" for 20% discount.)

Kaskey Kids has kindly offered to give away one Sports Guys Action Figure set to a Brimful Curiosities Reader. (The winner chooses which sports action figure set they would prefer to receive.)

To enter, leave a comment letting me know which "Sports Guys" set you'd choose if you won.
• For contact purposes, if you are a non-blogger or your email is not accessible in your blog profile, please leave a valid email address within the comment section.
• Contest is open to US only
• Contest ends on Monday, November 16th, 2009 at 11:59 PM CST.
• Winner will be chosen at random
Four ways to gain extra entries (Maximum total entries is 4 - leave a separate comment for each entry):
1st extra entry: Follow Me! or subscribe by email or RSS reader
2nd extra entry: Blog about this contest then post your link in the comment section.
3rd extra entry: Follow me on twitter (iambrimful) and tweet about the contest.


Thanks to Kaskey Kids for this review opportunity and for providing a free Baseball Guys set for my family to review. (View my full disclosure statement for more information about my reviews.)

28 Comments on Kaskey Kids "Sports Guys" Action Figures - Review and Giveaway, last added: 11/1/2009
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12. National Family Game Night and Pictureka!


Find the cow! Pictureka! You'd think growing up in America's Dairyland we'd be able to spot a cow within seconds. But that little, crazy cow in the Hasbro board game Pictureka! had us searching and searching. For whatever reason, it took my daughter and I about five minutes before we finally spotted the cow. We had a lot more success finding the other objects.

In Pictureka! the goal of the game is to locate objects fast. Those that have a quick eye and a good memory will love playing. It's kind of like an I-Spy cross Memory game with loopy, whimsical pictures. The first person to collect 6 mission cards wins. Recommended for ages 6+.

The board consists of 9 double-sided tiles with numerous, sometimes crazy illustrations (like a horse passing gas and a stinky sock.) You arrange the tiles in a 3x3 square. Throughout the game the tiles get switched, flipped, and rotated to make locating objects difficult.

Adults and kids will enjoy playing this one! You can even vary the game depending on age. For young kids and preschoolers that aren't able to read, the game can be played using only the picture (blue) cards. That's how I played it with my daughter. She really got into the game, at one point saying, "Come on brain! Let's do it!" I quickly realized that preschoolers are pretty observant. My daughter didn't want to put the game away. Those that are interested in bilingual products will like Pictureka! All the mission cards are written in both English and Spanish.




Want to try it out? Have some fun and try playing the Demo Pictureka! Game.

We're planning to play Pictureka again this evening. If you hadn't heard, tonight is National Family Game Night. Turn off that TV, gather the family together, exercise those brains and play a few board games! After all, it is TV Turn-off Week!

Which games do you like to play with your family? I'm looking for suggestions for preschool games in particular!




(Hasbro provided Pictureka! free of charge for my family to review. View my full disclosure statement for more information about my reviews.)

2 Comments on National Family Game Night and Pictureka!, last added: 9/27/2009
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