Calling all construction-loving children! Watch your child’s abilities and creations grow with the Magna-Tiles Builder 32-Piece Set. Snap together roads for your construction vehicles and use the functional, magnetic crane to lift bricks and transport them from one area to another. Your creativity will grow to new heights!
Designed for little children with big imaginations, the Magna-Tiles 32-Piece Builder Set encourages free play and reduces screen time while encouraging interest in STEAM learning. The magnetic, geometric shapes included in the Magna-Tiles 32-Piece Builder Set “click” together to create roads, buildings, trucks and anything else children can imagine! A pioneer in both classroom learning and screen-free playtime at home, Magna-Tiles created the 32-Piece Builder Set to inspire imagination and learning in everyone from children to adults. These original, high-quality magnetic tiles are just the right size for little hands and perfect for learning activities, fun experiments and hours of open-ended play.
The Magna-Tiles 32-Piece Builder Set is a must-have, versatile addition to your home or classroom and is suitable for children aged 3 years and older. The Magna-Tiles brand is STEAM-accredited and the Magna-Tiles 32-Piece Builder Set sparks hours of unstructured, free play in children. There is no right or wrong way to use them - instead, this vital screen-free playtime encourages children to explore their imagination while helping them develop essential skills, such as: colour theory, shape recognition, matching, design and architecture, fine and gross motor skills, balance and symmetry, magnetic principles, problem-solving, teamwork and more.
...what provides the inspiration for these write ups, today's your lucky day. You're about to find out.
99% of the time it's the products. Unsurprising. But also so very corporate and predictable. And we hate that. So once in a while we like to draw our creativity from elsewhere, such as:
If E is the most common letter in the English alphabet, why is it so particular? Surely it should've been shaped like an I, just a single straight line? It seems excessive to have to draw the extra three horizontal lines, when really it could've been avoided.
If you know the answer, as in really truly know, please write to us at EisshapedlikeEbecause@onedayonly.co.za
Otherwise enjoy thinking about that too for the next three or so years.