Wednesday, June 6, 2012

The Dollhouse: A timeless Toy for Hours of Fun

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Every little girl dreams of owning a dollhouse. Here, her tiny “family” holds their many adventures—adventures her active, imaginative mind is free to manufacture and reinvent each day. She can rearrange the furniture, reenact well-known rituals and scenes, and manufacture her own rules. “In a dollhouse, there is are bedtimes.” “In a doll house, every person gets to eat 100 pieces of chocolate cake…everyday!”

According to child experts, this kind of imaginative play is very healthy for a child. Beginning from the age of four, children survey the world that lies exterior their doors. They meet habitancy who aren’t part of the immediate family; they go to school and are asked to result rules and rituals that they don’t necessarily like. As they make new friends, they also learn new social skills, and struggle with concepts like sharing and taking turns. It can all be overwhelming.

Dollhouse Families

Control over a world (and her emotions)
But having a Kidkraft Dollhouse [http://www.wishrooms.com/pretendplay.html] gives them a sense of operate over a smaller world, and here they can “play-act” their fears while practicing the rituals and routines that are part of healthy social interaction. For example, when a child holds an imaginary party in her dollhouse, planning a guest list that includes stuffed rabbits and the Queen of Fairies, they are (subconsciously) working straight through their anxiety about large crowds and unfamiliar faces. They would probably hate any party that included habitancy they didn’t know, but talking about what cakes to serve and which parts of the dollhouse their guests will stay in, makes her feel more confident about interacting with others.

A great tool for developing social skills
Kidkraft Dollhouses are also a beloved in any playgroup, since they’re one of the few toys where it’s more fun when it’s shared. For young pre-schoolers who still hate having to give up a toy to someone else friend, they can spend many happy hours playing with the dolls without a single fight about who gets which.

A toy that changes every day
Dollhouses transform each time a child sits down next to it. Each time she makes a story, each time she gives the dolls a name and then acts out their rituals and adventures, the dollhouse becomes “different”. One day it’s a castle under a spell. The next day it’s the scene of a grand ball. And maybe today it’s just an lowly house, but the aliens (i.e., her brother’s Buzz Lightyear performance figure) attack. You never know.

A toy that’s fun at any age
Dollhouses are also one of the few toys that don’t get boring after a few weeks. In fact, because the fun lies in the child’s imagination, they can be played with for years. As she grows older, she’ll start production clothes for the dolls, designing her own little furniture and curtains, decorating the doll house and possibly creating whole novellas about its little residents. When she grows up, and the dollhouse is put away, it can be retrieved years later and given to her own daughter.

The Dollhouse: A timeless Toy for Hours of Fun

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