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Black, White and Fun Toys
High-contrast Toys for Baby
By Alexandria Powell
When I was pregnant with my first child, I wanted to do everything right. Besides obsessing over everything I ate and fretting over the homework from childbirth class, I worried about decorating the baby's room. I had learned that newborns seemed to prefer black-and-white patterns – but it was hard to find crib sheets done in graphic black, white and touches of red!
We eventually went with an animal theme that was mostly pastels and limited black and white to toys and decorations. However, I was surprised by how much our baby really did notice the black-and-white items. Parker was especially mesmerized by a poster with a checkerboard pattern that we'd pinned over his changing table.
Why are these high-contrast designs so compelling to infants? The answers can be found in the newborn eye and brain.
Newborns like to look at what they can see – so it's no wonder they seem to prefer high-contrast, black-and-white designs. They also seem to have strong preferences for certain patterns, especially faces.
"Babies seem to have an instinctive preference for faces, preferentially orienting to any oval with two spots for eyes and a line for a mouth," says Dr. Lise Eliot, author of What's Going on in There? How the Brain and Mind Develop in the First Five Years of Life
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