Showing posts with label building blocks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label building blocks. Show all posts

Mega Bloks Miniblocks Tote Classic Review

Mega Bloks Miniblocks Tote Classic
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
In general, for the price and value it is a GREAT deal comparing with other name brands like LEGO or DUPLO. The possibility for them to create something is endless (eventhough I was hoping they put more blocks inside). Amazon shipped it very fast too. I would recommend it to any family who has 18 - 48 months kids.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Mega Bloks Miniblocks Tote Classic

Let your imagination soar with this 40-piece Minibloks Tote. From dogs with wagging tails to slow moving snails and lots of other wild builds, mini blocks allow children between 3 and 6 to explore their creativity.

Buy NowGet 28% OFF

Click here for more information about Mega Bloks Miniblocks Tote Classic

Read More...

Melissa & Doug 60-Piece Standard Unit Blocks Review

Melissa and Doug 60-Piece Standard Unit Blocks
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
There is one reviewer here who didn't like these blocks. (I'm guessing that reviewer has other, more expensive, unit blocks.) Please allow me to address the points raised by that reviewer.
"The Weight": Some children can lift 15 pounds (like my 3-year-old), and some can't. Know your child, and supervise the little ones when moving the full box of blocks. Common sense, really. Not a problem. Usually, my kids leave the box on the floor and just push it across the carpet.
We have had one box split near the bottom at one end. A little wood glue and an overnight clamping session, and it was good to go. The dovetail joints are plenty strong for the job, even if there might be weak points in the wood. For the first while, my kids' favorite piece was the box (it was a boat, a bed, a car, etc.), so I'm not surprised that it had a problem.
"The Smell": yes, these blocks to have a slight odor to them when the package is first opened. It's the finish they use, and it's not strong at all. I would guess it's some type of natural oil. (Tung, linseed, or something similar.) I'm highly sensitive to chemicals and other odors (headaches and allergic reactions), and this didn't bother me at all. It dissipated quickly, and is completely unnoticeable after a short while. I especially like the finish M&D use on these blocks because it's not readily apparent, and yet it has kept the wood smooth. Even blocks that sneaked (under their own power, I'm sure ;o) into the bathtub have dried very well. The grain of the wood raised slightly, but smoothed back down nicely with play, and never splintered at all. The feel of these blocks is great, too. Smooth and pleasant to touch, but with enough texture to make them easy to manipulate for small hands.
"Not True Standard Unit Blocks": Um, yes, they are. The larger triangles are the size of two of the smaller triangles, two of which equal half of the standard unit block (1-1/2" x 2" x 5"). The hypotenuse of the large triangle is also the same length as the standard unit block (5"). The large triangles use variations of the same "unit" all the other blocks do. Just because HABA or other companies don't have a block that size doesn't mean it can't be done. Each and every block in this set shares the same width, as well as one other dimension (whether that second dimension is exactly the same as the first, or is a multiple of it).
And those little quarter circles are some of my kids' favorites. They're also great for helping to teach fractions, as are the half circles. Put 'em on their rounded edges on top of a little block, and you've got a nifty sailboat, to boot. Or on top of a pillar, and you've got a minaret spire. They're great.
"Not hardwood": Rubberwood is a hardwood. Not all hardwoods are as heavy as cherry or oak. Can you imagine how heavy this box would be if the blocks were made from a heavier hardwood? Ay! No thanks. It's heavy enough as it is.
I love it that the Rubberwood is tough as well as light. Along with the very tight, straight grain and smooth feel, my kids have abused these blocks for nearly four years now, and they're still looking great. (We now own two sets.)
To sum up: We love love love these blocks. If you have more than one child (or one very imaginative and creative child), you would do well to purchase two sets. (And you're still paying less for two sets than you would be buying 60 unit blocks from other companies.)
Cheap? No way.
An excellent value? Definitely!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Melissa & Doug 60-Piece Standard Unit Blocks

Build a tower, a town or just about anything with these large solid-wood standard unit blocks. The 60 big, smooth-sanded sturdy blocks are naturally finished with a classic look for hours of classic fun. The handsome wooden storage crate makes clean up and storage easy. Measures 15"L x 12.25"W x 5.25"D.

Buy NowGet 26% OFF

Click here for more information about Melissa & Doug 60-Piece Standard Unit Blocks

Read More...

Mega Bloks Micro Bloks Tub (1000) Review

Mega Bloks Micro Bloks Tub (1000)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
.
It's virtually impossible to review this product without referencing "you know who", the big Danish toy company whose patented building blocks or "bricks" dominate the market. The maker and my supplier of this product is the loyal oppposition, Megabrands, a Montreal-based company that has numerous toys and play items on the market, including their Mega Bloks Mini (the same scale as Duplo), and this product, Mega Blocks Micro (always specify "Micro").
And these bricks do interchange wonderfully for regular-sized Lego's -- the red is a little deeper but the construction looks identical except that this brand doesn't have the name of product tattoo'ed on each "hub." Who cares? It seems to me that there is a slightly more abundant proportion of the larger play building bricks -- that is, the same scale, but relatively more two-by-four hubs (a mainstay of Boomer-era Lego sets) or fewer "one by ones" and such that I've checked compared to similar-sized competitor sets. I checked, and this Mega Bloks 1000 piece ensemble includes 120 of the coveted two-by-four building bricks: that's 20 each of blue, yellow, white, red, black and green.
But the main point is, more for the money. Even after paying the not-inconsiderable shipping fee*, I got a thousand blocks in a tub and they averaged about $0.03-1/3 per brick. The tub is amply sized, with easily two-thirds of the available interior room left for adding whatever. They're cheaper, too: starter sets from Big Danish Toy Co. I have researched (I also bought one) seem generally run to about five to seven cents per brick, and ordering pieces "a la carte" thru the manufacturer's USA online sales division will almost certainly exceed that. This matters because costs mount up quickly: ask anyone with experience with this genre of building blocks and they'll probably tell you that the need for more building bricks usually blooms with the child's (or adult's) blooming creativity; and cubic volume being what it is, the number of new bricks needed can shoot up exponentially.
*In all fairness I should say that this product was fulfilled from an East Coast source and took no longer to get to me than any other ground UPS from the Northeast to Chicago.
By comparison, a smaller, 405-piece tub I just now reviewed from [big Toy Co.] will let you make one of three separate houses at a time, but the possibilities of creative play are left open. This thousand-piece product gives a bigger, slightly sturdier-feeling tub and almost two and-a-half times the blocks. There are enough pieces in this set to do several rudimentary structures at a time, or some pretend vehicles.
To go with the Mega Bloks Micro line, unless you switch-hit you'll forego the competitor's profusion of movie tie-ins, infrastructure projects like jet airports and jet airplanes, and idealized Danish suburbs and farms (Danish roofs really are hipped that steeply). This product is not without tie-ins, including one sci-fi compatible line that seem very space opera, not unlike 'Star Wars' but not 'Star Wars'. But mostly it's for people who want to, or want their children to, just dig in and build creatively. I did notice one tendency for Mega Bloks Micro bricks to stick together perhaps a little too well at times. But I don't want to blow this out of proportion as I am a notorious klutz with small objects, perhaps even more than as a child. Hence the overall five rating, and I don't know why the star-counts below didn't tot up properly. Four for fun, five for the other attributes, I'd say.
As a starter -- why not? As an "adder," especially for open-ended building -- I recommend this thousand-piece box of Mega Bloks Micro highly. I should also say that Mega Brands the manufacturer makes several other lines of bricks that are all compatible one to another the way Lego+Duplo can be married = the same-sized equivalent of Duplos being the Mega Bloks "Mini" line. You'll find sets of them in abundance at this site, too.
.
A note: Mega Blok products are manufactured in Canada. Any LEGO product I've seen (and I've seen a few) indicate provenence either in one of several European countries, or in Mexico. Neither contains Chinese components that I can tell. - a.s.
.

Click Here to see more reviews about: Mega Bloks Micro Bloks Tub (1000)

BIG BOX OF CONSTRUCTION BLOCKS. USE YOU IMAGINATION TO CREATE WHAT EVERY YOU WANT. COMPATIBLE WITH MOST MAJOR BRANDS. CHOCKING HAZARD - CONTAINS SMALL PARTS - NOT FOR CHILDREN UNDER 3

Buy Now

Click here for more information about Mega Bloks Micro Bloks Tub (1000)

Read More...

Fisher-Price Brilliant Basics Baby's First Blocks Review

Fisher-Price Brilliant Basics Baby's First Blocks
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
My son received this toy as a gift for his 6-month birthday. At the time, I remember hearing about how some plastic toys (often made in China) contain harmful chemicals that are known to cause cancer and feeling concerned that this toy might be one of them. I didn't do anything for awhile, seeing how my son enjoyed playing with the toy and thinking (stupidly) that if this toy were truly harmful, it wouldn't be sold in the U.S.
One day, I came across this toy on Amazon and noticed the warning to CA residents under "Product Details." I couldn't believe it when I read this toy is made with harmful chemicals known to "cause cancer and birth defects or other reproductive harm." I bet a lot of people who are giving this toy 5 stars are not aware of the warning.
UPDATE TO REVIEW ON 10-28-09: Amazon has removed the warning about the harmful chemicals, and in response to an inquiry I sent them told me "Product information from the item detail is added or deleted upon manufacturers information." Amazon suggested I contacted FP, which I did, and the FP rep said he couldn't find anything in their records indicating the toy's manufacturing had been changed. The toy's production has not been altered since 2007. He suggested that perhaps the warning wasn't accurate, and that's why it was removed. That may be, but it seems like a pretty big mistake for Amazon to make on multiple FP toys. I see now that none of the FP toys that previously had this warning have it now.
As for my son's reaction to the toy, he liked to bang the pieces together and put them in his mouth, but he never bothered to try to sort the shapes since the top doesn't stay in place, as others have mentioned. My son always removed the top and took out all of the pieces, no matter how many times I showed him how to sort the shapes with the top in place. Talk about poor design! I should have given it 1 star for the "educational" rating in hindsight, but I figured that theoretically it could be of some value if a child didn't remove the top. Also, Amazon wouldn't let me go back and change my ratings.
I just got another shape sorter for him from Amazon (the Tolo Rolling Shape Sorter), and within minutes he tried to put the shapes in the slots because he couldn't remove either the top or the bottom of the unit. Now that's an educational toy!

Click Here to see more reviews about: Fisher-Price Brilliant Basics Baby's First Blocks

Ten bright blocks are ready for baby to drop into the open bucket or through the shape-sorting lid. Baby will love filling the bucket with blocks, dumping them out, then starting over again. Great for eye-hand coordination and other early skills. Then baby can move on to sorting and stacking and learning about identifying and matching shapes. Includes plastic shape-sorting box with take-anywhere handle and ten colorful blocks.

Buy NowGet 13% OFF

Click here for more information about Fisher-Price Brilliant Basics Baby's First Blocks

Read More...