
Organic Market Stall + Fork
It's Playmobil market day! Which vendor has the crispiest vegetables and the sweetest fruits? With this colourful set, your child can gain their first shopping experience. Who delivers the groceries, and how are they weighed? With the Organic Market Stall, your child can playfully recreate the shopping process and, in the process, develop a sense of shapes, colours, and quantities. Does your child enjoy shopping? Then this set is perfect for you. At the Organic Market Stand, there's plenty for little market visitors to explore. The forklift delivers fruits and vegetables. Quickly, the crates are unloaded, and the sales begin. How many bananas are printed on the shape block? Who can turn the scale to the correct number? And how many fruits fit in the shopping cart? Who can sort all the fruits and vegetables into the right crate? After the successful shopping trip, there's still one question left: Which fruit or vegetable tastes best?
- Features
- About Playmobil
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- Figures: 1 man, 1 woman
- Animals: 1 dog
- Accessories: 1 market stall, 1 forklift, 1 shopping trolley, 1 scale, 3 crates, 3 fruit/vegetable elements
- New to Playmobil Junior, these kits are made from 90% recycled plastic (ISCC 208 standard)
- Suitable for children from 1 yr+
- Designed in Germany and Made in Malta
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Playmobil Junior playsets are manufactured of at least 90% plastic that can be traced back to materials left over from food or paper production according to the mass balance approach used in the circular economy and based on the ISCC 208 standard. These plastics are just as robust and easy to clean as ever. At least 90% recycled cardboard and 100% recycled paper are used for the packaging, avoiding plastic wherever possible.
Playmobil was invented by German inventor Hans Beck, a trained cabinet maker who wanted to create toys for children. After 3 years of development from 1971 to 1974, Playmobil was born. It became a pioneer in role-playing toys for children. The aim was to develop a toy that was not too complex yet flexible enough for it not to inhibit children's imagination. Beck wanted the toy to fit into a child's hand quickly and based the facial design on children's drawings: a large head with a big smile and no nose. When he passed the little figures to the children, he saw that they accepted them readily and invented little scenarios for them. "They never grew tired of playing with them," Beck remarked. That is when and where Playmobil started.