
I See Who!? Board Book With Flaps
Age/Stage: 6 months – 2 years
Peekaboo that grows with your child—belly laughs, early words, and everyday connection in just a few minutes.
Screen-Free || Peekaboo Flaps || Parent-Child Bonding || Inclusive By Design
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What This Builds
- Language and communication: Short, rhythmic lines and peekaboo naming turn lift-and-reveal moments into first words and real back-and-forth chatter.
- Social-emotional intelligence: Predictable peekaboo scenes with inclusive everyday characters build connection, turn-taking, and simple feelings words (“happy,” “surprised”).
- Memory and focus: Repeating “who’s hiding?” and remembering what’s under each sturdy flap strengthens attention and object permanence without feeling like a lesson.
- Fine motor skills: Finger-size flaps invite grasping, pinching, and page-turning—building the small hand muscles they’ll use for dressing and early writing.
- Eye-hand coordination: Lining up little fingers to lift each flap and point to pictures tunes eyes and hands to work smoothly together.
- Family rituals: A 2-minute peekaboo after breakfast and a calm re-read before nap create tiny, repeatable rituals that anchor the day.
What's Inside?

Premium flaps for little hands
Wipe-clean pages made
to survive drool, drops, and daily rereads.

8 Languages + Page To Personalize
Play peekaboo from around the world through rhythmic lines and friendly illustrations.

Inclusive, Everyday Scenes
Handy canvas bag to carry your new favorite mix-and-match game wherever you go.
FAQs
How does peekaboo help development?
Peekaboo teaches object permanence, supports attention and turn-taking, and invites early back-and-forth "conversations”—all wrapped in a predictable game that feels safe and fun.
Won't multiple languages be confusing for our baby?
No—hearing two or more languages does not delay development; babies can learn multiple languages at once, and “mixing” words is normal and temporary. Keep it simple and joyful and celebrate any attempt—quality interaction matters more than the number of languages.
Won't they get bored of the same book?
Babies and toddlers love repetition. Seeing the same pictures and hearing the same phrases helps the brain map words to meaning. Repeats build memory, confidence, and the “I can say it too!” moment.