Are you looking for good quality Kid's Toy Pianos for a child? If so you've come to the right place. Here you will find a collection of the best and coolest piano toys for kids of all ages, from babies with musical piano toys, to toddlers and bigger kids.
Cute keyboard pianos for kids, kids grand piano and even pianos for learning purposes. Start at a early age to start training to play piano. kid's toy pianos help your child to develop their creativity and a love for music.
https://about.me/newpiano
These kid's toy pianos make great gifts for Christmas or birthdays.
Find the Best Toy Pianos for Your Children!
Do you love music? If you want to pass that love or even introduce your young child to music then a great way is to buy a toy piano or any musical instrument for your girl or boy.
https://soundcloud.com/user-162353897
While it is true that if you really want them to learn then a real piano would be best, however; if they are still young and do not understand the concept just yet then a toy is a great solution!
It is also a great introduction to practicing as well as prepare them for future piano lessons!
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Here is a very nice selection of toy pianos for sale that you can choose from for your little Mozart
Baby Einstein Count and Compose Piano
https://genius.com/newpiano
Here is a piano for babies. Now even your baby can start learning the piano and practicing their dexterity. This toy has three built in learning devices including auditory, visual and language. You child will be introduced to numbers, melodies as well as well instruments.
There are built in colored lights along the screen that will help capture and keep baby's attention.
This piano comes with three different play modes and your baby will also be introduced to numbers 1-5 in Spanish, English and French when he/she presses the keys.
The Schoenhut piano is painted a vibrant red color and has 15 white keys and 10 black keys. This is a good choice for a toddler to begin piano lessons. The notes will sound just like chimes and piano is chromatically tuned.
https://www.reverbnation.com/control_room/artist/6236624/blog
Pink Toy Piano
This is a great option and one of the less expensive toy pianos (most are closer to 100 and over). This one is a pretty red piano and will make a nice gift for a little girl or boy.
Cute Toy Pianos for Children
Schoenhut Toy Piano -25 Key Elite Spinet with Bench
https://forums.nexopia.com/blogs/sound-of-that-schoenhut.15331562/
Here is an adorable upright toy piano by Schoenhut and might be for your child if you want not just a regular toy piano. It comes with a built in learning system with a removable color coded strip that can be added to help your child's fingers find the right chords.
This piano also has a songbook with songs your little one will more than likely recognize
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Get 4 Dr. Seuss Books for JUST 99 cents each! Includes classic’s like The Cat in The Hat & more. Plus get FREE Shipping!
Kids Love Dr. Seuss & His Friends. Classic Dr. Seuss hardcover storybooks. The Cat in the Hat, Go, Dog. Go!, Ten Apples Up On Top, Mr. Brown Can Moo! Can you?
"A person's a person, no matter how small," Theodor Seuss Geisel, a.k.a. Dr. Seuss, would say. "Children want the same things we want. To laugh, to be challenged, to be entertained and delighted."
Brilliant, playful, and always respectful of children, Dr. Seuss charmed his way into the consciousness of four generations of youngsters and parents. In the process, he helped millions of kids learn to read.
Dr. Seuss was born Theodor Geisel in Springfield, Massachusetts, on March 2, 1904. After graduating from Dartmouth College in 1925, he went to Oxford University, intending to acquire a doctorate in literature. At Oxford, Geisel met Helen Palmer, whom he wed in 1927. Upon his return to America later that year, Geisel published cartoons and humorous articles for Judge, the leading humor magazine in America at that time. His cartoons also appeared in major magazines such as Life, Vanity Fair, and Liberty. Geisel gained national exposure when he won an advertising contract for an insecticide called Flit. He coined the phrase, "Quick, Henry, the Flit!" which became a popular expression.
Geisel published his first children's book, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, in 1937, after 27 publishers rejected it.
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1984, an Academy Award, three Emmy Awards, three Grammy Awards, and three Caldecott Honors, Geisel wrote and illustrated 44 books. While Theodor Geisel died on September 24, 1991, Dr. Seuss lives on, inspiring generations of children of all ages to explore the joys of reading.
Encouraging your child to embrace the joys of reading is one of the most important things you can do to help ensure her academic success, social and communication skills, healthy expression of emotions, and cognitive development. Early reading has also been shown to foster better memory, concentration, and vocabulary skills later in life.
The Dr. Seuss & His Friends book club was created to help parents build a library of insightful, entertaining books for their children to enjoy. While it’s certainly possible—and encouraged—to create your own family reading routine, joining a book club can offer an abundance of advantages to both parents and children.
Recapture your childhood. Return to a more carefree, lighthearted time by embracing the same classic favorites you enjoyed as a youngster—this time through the eyes of your own children—when you join the Dr. Seuss & His Friends book club.
Connect with your family. Sharing a book by Dr. Seuss or one of the other well-known authors in the club—P.D. Eastman, Stan and Jan Berenstain, Robert Lopshire, and Richard Scarry, among others—provides an excellent opportunity to cuddle up with your children and page through a family-friendly story, forging bonds that will endure for a lifetime.
Help soothe your child. From a very early age, infants have shown a proclivity for their parent’s voice, heartbeat, and smell. Reading Dr. Seuss titles out loud while holding your baby close helps to create a calming, nurturing environment and establish a love of reading early on.
Create a relaxing routine. Reading is one of the most calming activities you can incorporate into your child’s day, providing a welcome break from the typically frenzied nature of modern family life. Use your favorite Dr. Seuss stories to prepare kids for bedtime or naptime, or just to provide some downtime for relaxing and unwinding.
Library of classic Dr. Seuss booksBuild a high-quality library. For an educational, cost-effective learning tool that’s also highly entertaining, you can’t beat the power of books. Encourage your children to maintain their own personal libraries of Dr. Seuss characters. When you join the Dr. Seuss & His Friends book club, they can swap and share among themselves, “checking out” books from siblings’ libraries. When you join our book club, you’ll receive easily digestible monthly shipments of titles hand-picked by today’s educational experts, tailored to your child’s age range and interests.
Foster creativity and imagination. The uncontested master of creative verse, Dr. Seuss adhered to a poetic meter called anapestic tetrameter to create his innovative, rhythmic rhymes. His unique wordplay and whimsical tongue twisters are ideal for building the imaginations of your little ones.
Provide an interactive reading experience. The stories in the Dr. Seuss & His Friends book club are meant to be performed, not read silently. Incorporate drama and inflection into each verse, demonstrating to your children how fun and interactive reading can be.
Read, enjoy, and repeat. Toddlers thrive on routine. The rhythmic nature of the verses presented by Dr. Seuss and various other wonderful children's book authors is conducive to repetition. After “The End,” you can fully expect to hear “Again!”
Dr. Seuss bibliography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Theodor Seuss Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, published over 60 children's books over the course of his long career. Though most were published under his well-known pseudonym, Dr. Seuss, he also authored over a dozen books as Theo. LeSieg and one as Rosetta Stone. As one of the most popular children's authors of all time, Geisel's books have topped many bestseller lists, sold over 222 million copies, and been translated into more than 15 languages.[1] In 2000, when Publishers Weekly compiled their list of the best-selling children's books of all time; 16 of the top 100 hardcover books were written by Geisel, including Green Eggs and Ham, at number 4, The Cat in the Hat, at number 9, and One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish, at number 13, and Dr. Seuss's ABC.[2] In the years following his death in 1991, several additional books based on his sketches and notes were published, including Hooray for Diffendoofer Day! and Daisy-Head Mayzie. Although they were all published under the name Dr. Seuss, only My Many Colored Days, originally written in 1973, was entirely by Geisel.
Dr. Seuss books
The bulk of Theodor Seuss Geisel's books were published under the name of Dr. Seuss. Except for Great Day for Up!, My Book about ME and I Am NOT Going to Get Up Today!, these books were illustrated and written by Geisel. Note only first edition information is given.
Title | Year | Publisher |
---|---|---|
The Pocket Book of Boners | 1931 | Viking Press |
This book is a collection of humorous anecdotes and illustrations representing some of the earliest work credited to Dr. Seuss. The 1941 printing of The Pocket Book of Bonerscompiles four separate books that were issued in 1931. | ||
And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street | 1937 | Vanguard Press |
Marco watches the sight and sounds of people and vehicles traveling along Mulberry Street and dreams up an elaborate story to tell to his father at the end of his walk. | ||
The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins | 1938 | Vanguard Press |
In the kingdom of Didd, King Derwin is riding through a street past Bartholomew Cubbins, a poor boy in the market. Bartholomew removes his hat, according to the laws, but another hat mysteriously appears; when he attempts to remove this one too, another one appears again, and this continues, even as he removes more and more hats, each growing in extravagance and beauty. | ||
The Seven Lady Godivas | 1939 | Random House |
The seven Lady Godivas each learn a moral while taking care of a horse. | ||
The King's Stilts | 1939 | Random House |
The story of King Bertram of Binn, who dedicates himself to safeguarding his kingdom, which has a precarious existence. It is surrounded by water, which is held back from flooding the land by a ring of dike trees, which are in turn subject to attack from flocks of nizzards. To protect the kingdom, a legion of Patrol Cats is organized to keep the nizzards at bay, and King Bertram sees to their care personally. | ||
Horton Hatches the Egg | 1940 | Random House |
An elephant named Horton is convinced by an irresponsible bird named Mayzie to sit on her egg while she takes a short break, which proves to last for months. Made into aMerrie Melodies cartoon in 1942. | ||
McElligot's Pool | 1947 | Random House |
A Caldecott Honor Book. A boy named Marco is ridiculed for fishing in a small, polluted pool, and tries to justify himself by imagining the fish he might catch. It is one of the few books by Geisel to use paintings as the medium for its illustrations, rather than his common use of pen and ink. | ||
Thidwick the Big-Hearted Moose | 1948 | Random House |
Thidwick, a moose who lives in a herd "about sixty or more", accepts a bug living on his antlers for free, who tells a spider of the free housing, and both accept a "Zinn-a-zu" bird, and this leads to a whole host of freeloaders taking up residence. | ||
Bartholomew and the Oobleck | 1949 | Random House |
A Caldecott Honor Book. Bartholomew must rescue his kingdom from a sticky substance called oobleck. A sequel to The 500 Hats of Bartholomew Cubbins. | ||
If I Ran the Zoo | 1950 | Random House |
A Caldecott Honor Book. Gerald McGrew visits a zoo and finds that the animals are "not good enough" and describes how he would run the zoo. He would let all of the current animals free and find new, more bizarre and exotic ones. | ||
Gerald McBoing Boing | 1952 | Simon & Schuster |
Based on the Academy Award-winning short film of the same name. First Dr. Seuss book not illustrated by Geisel. | ||
Scrambled Eggs Super! | 1953 | Random House |
A young boy named Peter T. Hooper spins a tale of an incredible meal he created by harvesting the eggs of fantastically exotic birds. | ||
Horton Hears a Who! | 1954 | Random House |
Horton the Elephant of the Jungle of Nool hears a small speck of dust talking to him. The speck of dust is actually a tiny planet, home to a city called Who-ville, inhabited by microscopic-sized inhabitants known as Whos and led by a character known as the Mayor. Adapted into a feature length CGI film. | ||
On Beyond Zebra! | 1955 | Random House |
The young narrator, not content with the confines of the ordinary alphabet, invents additional letters beyond Z, with a fantastic creature corresponding to each new letter. | ||
If I Ran the Circus | 1956 | Random House |
Behind Mr. Sneelock's ramshackle store, there's an empty lot. Little Morris McGurk is convinced that if he could just clear out the rusty cans, the dead tree, and the old cars, nothing would prevent him from using the lot for the amazing, world-beating, Circus McGurkus. | ||
The Cat in the Hat | 1957 | Random House/Houghton Mifflin |
The Cat in the Hat brings his companions, Thing One and Thing Two, to a household of two young children one rainy day. Chaos ensues while the children wonder how they are going to explain what happens to their mother. First Beginner Books entry written and illustrated by Dr. Seuss. Adapted into a 2003 feature-length film | ||
How the Grinch Stole Christmas! | 1957 | Random House |
The Grinch, a bitter, cave-dwelling creature tries to steal everything related to Christmas by impersonating Santa Claus. Eventually he realizes he has a heart for Christmas after all. Adapted into a 1966 television special and a 2000 feature-length film | ||
The Cat in the Hat Comes Back | 1958 | Random House |
The Cat in the Hat returns and while he leaves Thing One and Thing Two at home, he does bring along Little Cat A nested inside his hat. Little Cat A doffs his hat to reveal Little Cat B, who in turn reveals C, and so on down to the microscopic Little Cat Z. Together they try to get rid of a pink ring that has spread from the bathtub to the dress, to the wall, into some shoes, and finally out onto the snow where they work to get rid of it. | ||
Yertle the Turtle and Other Stories | 1958 | Random House |
Consists of three stories:
| ||
Happy Birthday to You! | 1959 | Random House |
Deals with a fantastic land, called Katroo, where the Birthday Bird throws everyone an amazing party on their special day. | ||
One Fish Two Fish Red Fish Blue Fish | 1960 | Random House |
A simple rhyming book for learner readers, that has a freewheeling plot about a boy and a girl, and the many amazing creatures they have for friends and pets. | ||
Green Eggs and Ham | 1960 | Random House |
Sam-I-am consistently pesters an unnamed character (who is also the narrator) to try green eggs and ham. The unnamed character refuses to eat the food, insisting that he would not like it until the end. | ||
The Sneetches and Other Stories | 1961 | Random House |
Consists of four stories:
| ||
Dr. Seuss's Sleep Book | 1962 | Random House |
A small bug yawn spreads contagiously and though various creatures, including the Foona Lagoona Baboona, the Collapsable Frink, the Chippendale Mupp, The Offt, and the Krandles. | ||
Dr. Seuss's ABC | 1963 | Random House |
An alphabet book which features many strange creatures from the Aunt Annie's Alligator to the Zizzer-Zazzer-Zuzz. | ||
Hop on Pop | 1963 | Random House |
Hop on Pop provides simple rhymes to help beginner reading, such as a character named Pat who sits on a hat, a cat, a bat and must not sit on that (which is a cactus). Shows a variety of characters and teaches sentence composition. | ||
Fox in Socks | 1965 | Random House |
Mr. Fox challenges Mr. Knox with rhyming tongue-twisters, which begins to get on Knox's nerves. | ||
I Had Trouble in Getting to Solla Sollew | 1965 | Random House |
A tale of a young person who discovers the "troubles" of life and wishes to escape them. | ||
The Cat in the Hat Song Book | 1967 | Random House |
A book exploring a wide variety of Dr. Seuss songs. Piano Score and Guitar Chords by Eugene Poddany | ||
The Foot Book | 1968 | Random House |
Introduces many different creatures with different feet. First Bright and Early Books entry written and illustrated by Dr. Seuss. | ||
I Can Lick 30 Tigers Today! and Other Stories | 1969 | Random House |
The title story concerns a boy who brags that he can fight 30 tigers and win. However, he makes excuse after excuse, finally disqualifying all the tigers until he must fight no tigers at all. The illustrations are notable for their use of gouache and brush strokes rather than the usual pen and ink. Others stories include King Looie Katz, another warning against hierarchical society advocating self-reliance, and The Glunk That Got Thunk about the power of run-away imagination. | ||
My Book about ME | 1969 | Random House |
This book is deliberately incomplete as there are blanks on every page where the child is meant to fill in answers specific to him or her. The only book co-written and co-illustrated by Roy McKie. | ||
I Can Draw It Myself | 1970 | Random House |
A coloring book featuring rhyming instructions to help children complete various pictures, culminating in a challenge to the child to draw his or her own "Big Something". The full title of the book is I Can Draw It Myself by Me, Myself. | ||
Mr. Brown Can Moo! Can You?: Dr. Seuss's Book of Wonderful Noises! | 1970 | Random House |
The book shows the sounds "Mr. Brown" can make, such as a cow's "moo", a frying pan's "sizzle", and a hippo's "grum". It was written so children would be able to learn aboutonomatopoeia and the sounds that they hear every day. | ||
The Lorax | 1971 | Random House |
The Lorax chronicles the plight of the environment and the Lorax (a mossy, bossy man-like creature resembling an emperor tamarin), who speaks for the trees against the greedy Once-ler. Also a feature length CGI film. | ||
Marvin K. Mooney Will You Please Go Now! | 1972 | Random House |
Marvin K. Mooney is asked to leave in many ways. | ||
Did I Ever Tell You How Lucky You Are? | 1973 | Random House |
Discusses an amusing litany of terrible predicaments which could befall a person, with the repeated admonishment that "you're really quite lucky". | ||
The Shape of Me and Other Stuff | 1973 | Random House |
Explores the adventures of two kids and their journey to learn about all the shapes and sizes that make up our world. | ||
There's a Wocket in My Pocket! | 1974 | Random House |
A little boy talks about what strange creatures live in his house, such as the Yeps on the steps, the Nooth Grush on his toothbrush, the Yottle in the bottle and the Jertain in the curtain. The last Bright and Early Books entry illustrated by Dr. Seuss. | ||
Great Day for Up! | 1974 | Random House |
Every new day starts a new adventure. Illustrated by Quentin Blake. | ||
Oh, the Thinks You Can Think! | 1975 | Random House |
About the many amazing 'thinks' one can think and the endless possibilities and dreams that imagination can create. | ||
The Cat's Quizzer | 1976 | Random House |
The Cat in the Hat asks many, sometimes ridiculous, questions of the reader. This is the only Beginner Books reissue (B-75) written and illustrated by Dr. Seuss. | ||
I Can Read with My Eyes Shut! | 1978 | Random House |
The Cat in the Hat shows a Young Cat the fun he can get out of reading. Also shows that reading is a useful tool to acquire knowledge. | ||
Oh Say Can You Say? | 1979 | Random House |
A collection of 25 tongue-twisters such as "Oh my brothers! Oh my sisters! These are Terrible Tongue Twisters!" The last Beginner Books entry illustrated by Dr. Seuss. | ||
Hunches in Bunches | 1982 | Random House |
A boy is approached by numerous strange creatures with enormous gloved hats on their heads. Each "hunch" points out a different possible course of action with some even contradicting themselves. | ||
The Butter Battle Book | 1984 | Random House |
The conflict between the Yooks and the Zooks over which side of bread to spread butter on leads to an arms race, each competing to make bigger and nastier weapons to outdo the other, which results in the threat of mutual assured destruction. | ||
You're Only Old Once! | 1986 | Random House |
An old man journeys through a clinic and sees its inefficiency. | ||
I Am NOT Going to Get Up Today! | 1987 | Random House |
A lazy boy chooses to stay in bed despite media coverage and the arrival of the U.S. Marines. Illustrated by James Stevenson, the last Beginner Books entry written by Dr. Seuss. | ||
The Tough Coughs as He Ploughs the Dough | 1987 | Random House |
A collection of Dr. Seuss' early writings and cartoons, edited by Richard Marschall. | ||
Oh, the Places You'll Go! | 1990 | Random House |
The last book published before Dr. Seuss' death, about life and its challenges. |
Brilliant, playful, and always respectful of children, Dr. Seuss charmed his way into the consciousness of four generations of youngsters and parents. In the process, he helped millions of kids learn to read.
Dr. Seuss was born Theodor Geisel in Springfield, Massachusetts, on March 2, 1904. After graduating from Dartmouth College in 1925, he went to Oxford University, intending to acquire a doctorate in literature. At Oxford, Geisel met Helen Palmer, whom he wed in 1927. Upon his return to America later that year, Geisel published cartoons and humorous articles for Judge, the leading humor magazine in America at that time. His cartoons also appeared in major magazines such as Life, Vanity Fair, and Liberty. Geisel gained national exposure when he won an advertising contract for an insecticide called Flit. He coined the phrase, "Quick, Henry, the Flit!" which became a popular expression.
Geisel published his first children's book, And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street, in 1937, after 27 publishers rejected it.
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize in 1984, an Academy Award, three Emmy Awards, three Grammy Awards, and three Caldecott Honors, Geisel wrote and illustrated 44 books. While Theodor Geisel died on September 24, 1991, Dr. Seuss lives on, inspiring generations of children of all ages to explore the joys of reading.
8 WAYS FAMILIES BENEFIT FROM DR. SEUSS BOOKS
No two moms are exactly alike, but most share a common goal: to provide the best for their children. Above and beyond the obvious basic needs—cribs, changing tables, strollers, clothing—proper guidance and support are essential to helping your little one achieve important developmental milestones. Formal education may not begin until preschool, but your child actually begins learning from the very first day he or she enters the world.Encouraging your child to embrace the joys of reading is one of the most important things you can do to help ensure her academic success, social and communication skills, healthy expression of emotions, and cognitive development. Early reading has also been shown to foster better memory, concentration, and vocabulary skills later in life.
Dr. Seuss and His Friends Club
The Dr. Seuss & His Friends book club was created to help parents build a library of insightful, entertaining books for their children to enjoy. While it’s certainly possible—and encouraged—to create your own family reading routine, joining a book club can offer an abundance of advantages to both parents and children.
Recapture your childhood. Return to a more carefree, lighthearted time by embracing the same classic favorites you enjoyed as a youngster—this time through the eyes of your own children—when you join the Dr. Seuss & His Friends book club.
Connect with your family. Sharing a book by Dr. Seuss or one of the other well-known authors in the club—P.D. Eastman, Stan and Jan Berenstain, Robert Lopshire, and Richard Scarry, among others—provides an excellent opportunity to cuddle up with your children and page through a family-friendly story, forging bonds that will endure for a lifetime.
Help soothe your child. From a very early age, infants have shown a proclivity for their parent’s voice, heartbeat, and smell. Reading Dr. Seuss titles out loud while holding your baby close helps to create a calming, nurturing environment and establish a love of reading early on.
Create a relaxing routine. Reading is one of the most calming activities you can incorporate into your child’s day, providing a welcome break from the typically frenzied nature of modern family life. Use your favorite Dr. Seuss stories to prepare kids for bedtime or naptime, or just to provide some downtime for relaxing and unwinding.
Library of classic Dr. Seuss booksBuild a high-quality library. For an educational, cost-effective learning tool that’s also highly entertaining, you can’t beat the power of books. Encourage your children to maintain their own personal libraries of Dr. Seuss characters. When you join the Dr. Seuss & His Friends book club, they can swap and share among themselves, “checking out” books from siblings’ libraries. When you join our book club, you’ll receive easily digestible monthly shipments of titles hand-picked by today’s educational experts, tailored to your child’s age range and interests.
Foster creativity and imagination. The uncontested master of creative verse, Dr. Seuss adhered to a poetic meter called anapestic tetrameter to create his innovative, rhythmic rhymes. His unique wordplay and whimsical tongue twisters are ideal for building the imaginations of your little ones.
Provide an interactive reading experience. The stories in the Dr. Seuss & His Friends book club are meant to be performed, not read silently. Incorporate drama and inflection into each verse, demonstrating to your children how fun and interactive reading can be.
Read, enjoy, and repeat. Toddlers thrive on routine. The rhythmic nature of the verses presented by Dr. Seuss and various other wonderful children's book authors is conducive to repetition. After “The End,” you can fully expect to hear “Again!”
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