30 Minutes a Day. A Lifetime of Benefits.

We live in an age where children learn to swipe a screen before they learn to hold a pencil. This matters more than we might think. Research* shows that increased screen time in early childhood is directly linked to declining fine motor skills: poorer hand-eye coordination, reduced muscle control, and greater difficulty with writing and drawing.
In this context, a printed activity book is not just a distraction, it's a counterbalance. When a child colours, traces, cuts, or writes, they are not just completing a task. They are training their brain, strengthening their fingers, and learning to focus. A magazine does not send notifications, open new apps, or redirect attention. It simply waits and invites the child to be fully present.
Studies support this clearly: children who spend 30 minutes daily with printed activity books show 73% better sustained attention compared to those using tablets. A printed activity book is not a step backward; it is a necessary step forward.
For more than 30 years, we have been creating activity books and magazines that help children learn, discover, and develop essential skills through play. This experience has given us a deep understanding of what engages young minds and supports healthy development.
We do not create books to compete with technology. We create them to help children grow – pencil in hand, mixing colours, sticking, and finding answers on the page. Because some things are still learned best by doing them by hand.
Explore our collection and discover over three decades of expertise in children's publishing. Browse our portfolio and get in touch.
*Harvard Medical School, 2024 Study; Bakht et al., Pediatric Discovery, 2025







