Bunny Baby Comforter

Regular price R 190.00 ZAR

Soft, small, and endlessly satisfying to hold, this taggie comforter was made for tiny hands still learning what the world feels like. A gentle bunny sits in the corner of a textured square blanket, surrounded by colourful fabric tags of different textures and lengths for little fingers to find, pull, and fiddle with. 

This is the kind of toy that becomes a companion rather than just a plaything. Babies often return to the same tags again and again, learning their shape and position by touch alone, a quiet, repetitive comfort that helps in the car seat, in the pram, or during a wobbly moment before sleep. The mix of textures across the blanket, the bunny, and the ribbon tags gives a baby several different sensory experiences within one small, easy-to-grasp square.

What's Included:

  • 1 x Bunny taggie comforter blanket 

What the OT Says:

Taggie comforters like this one are often the very first sensory toy I recommend to new parents, because they do so much developmental work while looking so simple. Each fabric tag offers a slightly different texture, weight, and edge, which gives a baby's fingers repeated, varied tactile input. This kind of early tactile exploration supports sensory processing and helps build the sensory foundations a child will later rely on for more complex fine motor tasks.

The small size and soft, pliable fabric make this comforter ideal for practising an early palmar grasp, as babies learn to hold, release, and re-grasp the blanket in their hands. Reaching for a tag, gripping it, and bringing it towards their mouth or eyes also supports early hand-eye coordination and body awareness, as a baby begins to understand where their hands are in space and what they can do with them.

The rattle adds an auditory layer too. A gentle sound paired with the physical action of  shaking introduces early cause-and-effect learning, and can be a lovely regulation tool, many babies find a consistent, soft sound genuinely calming, which supports self-soothing and settling routines.