Wooden Toy Products Seattle WA

Wooden toys have come a long way from the rudimentary car or doll someone's uncle whittled out of a stray stick. They're colorful, imaginative and even challenging. Here are some suggestions for you to consider. Please scroll down for more information and access to the toy stores in Seattle, WA listed below.

Pirates Plunder
(206) 624-5673
1301 Alaskan Way
Seattle, WA
 
Zanadu Comics
(206) 443-1316
1923 3rd Ave
Seattle, WA
 
Grandma's Attic
(206) 682-9281
1501 Pike Pl Ste 319
Seattle, WA
 
Front Porch Classics
(206) 826-3202
83 S King St Ste 414
Seattle, WA
 
Magic Mouse Toys
(206) 682-8097
603 1st Ave
Seattle, WA
 
FAO Schwarz
(206) 442-9500
1420 5th Ave
Seattle, WA
 
Schmancy
(206) 728-8008
1932 2nd Ave
Seattle, WA
 
The Electric Train Shop
(206) 223-0181
110 Alaskan Way S
Seattle, WA
 
International Model Toys
(206) 682-8534
601 S King St
Seattle, WA
 
Great Wind-Up
(206) 621-9370
93 Pike St Ste 201
Seattle, WA
 

A Wooden Toy for the Imaginative Baby or Toddler Who Loves You

A Wooden Toy for the Imaginative Baby or Toddler Who Loves You

August 20, 2009   Marisa Belger

If and when we decide to have another baby, I’m seriously debating adding a concise, but clear message to the pregnancy announcement. I see it going something like this: “I’m pregnant! Please keep your plastic presents.” It may be generational—I find that my parents and their friends are particularly adamant about filling a new person’s life with shiny, plastic toys, mostly of the flashing light, song-singing variety. The older crowd seems to think we’re keeping our little ones trapped in a dull, unstimulating universe of boring, unanimated toys. For me, the appeal for wooden amusements is three-fold: each wooden toy I purchase will hopefully keep another hunk of battery-powered primary-colored plastic out of a landfill; toys that are fueled by nothing but kid-energy require an increased amount of ingenuity and imagination (two qualities I’d love to cultivate in my offspring); and when sucked on, licked and otherwise caressed and cuddled, wooden toys highlighted with non-toxic paint are less harmful than their BPA, Phthalate-riddled plastic counterparts.

Wooden toys have come a long way from the rudimentary car or doll someone’s uncle whittled out of a stray stick. They’re colorful, imaginative and even challenging. Here are some of W’s favorites:

Happy kids make happy parents, but sometimes you can make everyone happy simultaneously. Plan Toy’s Oval Xylophone ($20.08; Amazon.com) does just that by giving W something to bang with ferocity, while keeping the noise level to a lovely low roar. The Xylophone made from organic recycled rubber wood and water-based dyes and is clearly the perfect first instrument for the aspiring musician.

I’m not sure who enjoys stacking more—W or me. All I know is that I’m obsessed with keeping all of the concentric rings of Melissa & Doug’s Rainbow Stacker ($8.50; Amazon.com) in sight—an increasingly...

Click here to read the rest of this article from The Lazy Environmentalist