
Anamalz are the award winning wooden animal range designed in Australia and made from sustainable wood and textile products. That have the unique function to bend into different poses. The wood comes from plantation forests, and child friendly paint, azo free dye and formaldehyde free glue as well as minimal packaging are all part of their pitch. Any waste wood is used on a farm to grow mushrooms. Anamalz horns and antlers use arboform™, an eco-alternative to plastic made from injection moulded wood (clever hey!) Anamalz are on a serious mission!· Their development focus is on creating safe products using eco aware materials while simultaneosuly creating professional entertainment through the web, using animation, publishing and music.
Check out their website (it’s very interactive and playful and just downright lovely-give it the minute it needs to load) and you’ll know why we have to have these!· http://anamalz.com/
Anamalz has established its own trust fund committed to contributing funds to various wildlife and children’s organisations around the world. As the sales of anamalz grows ‘anamalz saving animals(CSC) foundation will be able to contribute to more funds
age guide 3+
size 10cmx9cm
Tags: Anamalz, Wooden animals, Toy farm animals, Toy wild animals, eco aware toys, environmentally aware toys, award winning toys
Play is the platform by which children learn and explore their senses and indulge their seemingly endless curiosity. They learn about themselves, the world around them and the people they interact with through play. Sharing a toy is probably one of the first lessons children learn that engages an awareness extending outside of themselves. As an adult, playing with a toy and sharing precious time with a child is the stuff memories are made of.
Toys naturally goodies are all predominantly wood; because wood is timeless, it’s natural and it’s innocent, like children. Wood tastes, it smells, has varying textures because of its grain and differing weights because of it's hardness. It clinks and clunks and is an infinitely more sensory material than unpromising plastic.