Fisher Price Precious Planet 2 in 1 Projection Mobile
by Fisher-PriceThis is a projection mobile with a canopy that brings the light show closer to baby. A delicate canopy hangs overhead of the baby with four plush characters attached to it (teal whale, white polar bear, green alligator and yellow lion). Each character represents an "environment" from around the world. A soft light pattern is projected from the base of the mobile onto the inside of the canopy.
When baby grows, the armature can be removed, and the light pattern can project onto the ceiling. This mobile plays 20 minutes of music, which includes classical lullabies (Bach, Beethoven and Mozart), nature sounds, ocean sounds, and heart beat / white noise womb sounds. The mobile attaches to the crib with our new, improved mechanism and comes with a remote control.
Product Details:
- From birth +
- 4 x D Batteries required (not included)
- Images project on canopy for younger babies
- Converts to music box with ceiling projection for older babies
- Restart without disturbing baby
- Innovative attaching method fits more cribs
- 3 musical settings, up to 20mins of music
- Classical lullabies, nature sounds or womb sounds
Fisher Price Philisophy
Fisher Price believe in the potential of children and in the importance of a supportive environment during the preschool years.
Fisher Price Mission
To support today's families with young children through a breadth of products and services that make early childhood more fun and enriching.
What Fisher Price Stand For
Fisher-Price helps you give your family the best possible start in life.
Fisher Price Values
In keeping with our long-standing tradition of innovation, quality, durability, safety and good value, Fisher price offer baby toys that can trust to improve their family's lives. Through the power of teamwork, Fisher Price challenge themselves to strive for excellence and to exceed their consumers' expectations.
Fisher Price creed
Since 1930, Fisher Price have been in business to create baby and toddler toys that fascinate and stimulate a child's imagination. In fact, their founders' criteria for toymaking still holds true today:
"Fisher-Price® toys should have intrinsic play value, ingenuity, strong construction, good value and action." Herman Fisher, Irving Price, Helen Schelle.
Delivery Cost
On all orders to mainland UK addresses we are able to offer an incentivised carriage charge based on your order value with us as follows:| Order Value (£) | Delivery Charge (£) |
|---|---|
| £0.00 to £49.99 | £3.99 |
| £50.00 to £74.99 | £2.25 |
| £75.00 + | FREE |
- Orders for the Scottish Highlands, the Channel Islands (Jersey and Guernsey), the Isle of Man or Ireland will all be charged at £9.95.
- We are able to deliver to European destinations and other parts of the world. Please refer our Delivery tab (at top) for more details.
Play is absolutely necessary for developement. Play is crucial for your child's social, emotional, physical, and cognitive growth. It's your child's way of learning about his body and the world, and he'll use all five senses to do it, especially in the first year. What does this feel like when I touch it? What does this sound like when I squeeze it? What will happen if I push this or pull that? Crawl over there? Pull myself up on this? Exploration is the heart of play, and in your child's mind any experiment counts, even hurling a bowl of cereal off the highchair tray. Development experts are fond of saying that play is the work of children (and cleaning up after play seems to be the work of parents).
As your child moves into the toddler years, his play will become more imaginative and complex. Through play, he'll exercise key skills and qualities, such as independence, creativity, curiosity, and problem-solving. It can also be an important place to explore feelings and values and develop social skills. Long before your child feels comfortable sharing his favorite toy with his sister, he may offer it to a doll. His first spontaneous "please" and "thank you" may slip out at an imaginary tea party. And what parent can resist wasting a perfectly good bandage the first time her child says his teddy got hurt?

















