A smart puzzle that teaches how to see the whole from the parts
Twelve cheerful winter scenes, each split into smaller pieces — the child’s task is to assemble each full picture using logic, spatial skills, and visual memory. At first glance it seems easy, but this game activates deep thinking: shape, corner, direction, fragment, color — everything must align to complete the image. It’s early cognitive training in the most playful way.
2 durable puzzle boards (each 24 × 16 cm)
12 winter illustrations, divided into 4 square pieces (each 6 × 6 cm)
Total of 24 pieces to reconstruct full scenes
Safe materials and vibrant printing
6 mm thickness — easy for small hands
Understanding of part–whole relationships
Logical and visual-spatial thinking
Attention to detail and shape matching
Fine motor control and finger precision
Patience, focus, and memory
Visual perception and early analytical skills
Remove all pieces from one board and shuffle them
Invite the child to reassemble each picture correctly
Talk together: “What’s missing?”, “Where does this corner go?”, “What’s in this scene?”
Add difficulty: cover part of the board, ask to rebuild from memory, or use a timer
“Complete the scene” — describe what’s happening in each illustration
“Find the mistake” — place one incorrect piece and ask the child to spot it
“What changed?” — replace one square and test observation
Great for winter themes, logic development, shape recognition
Preschools, kindergartens, early learning centers
Montessori and NUS educators, therapists
Parents of children ages 2–5
Toy and educational gift shops
Classic early logic game based on the Nikitin Method
Compact, giftable format — excellent for seasonal promotion
Combines puzzles, logic, and storytelling in one product
Suitable for both free play and guided lessons
Strong educational value = high sell-through for schools and therapists
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This is more than a puzzle — it’s a child's first step toward structural thinking. Learning to piece things together builds confidence, focus, and imagination — one square at a time