The Board With Jesus On It. Because That’s the Whole Story.
Every other baptism puzzle circles the story. The Kukoo™ Little Ichthys Name Puzzle puts Jesus at the center of it — arms open, golden halo, rendered with the warmth of the oldest Sunday school illustration and the quality of something built to last. Eight pieces on a warm butter-yellow board: four symbols across the top, four cathedral-arch scenes across the bottom, the child’s name in lavender and pink across the middle of all of it.
The fish that started everything. The cross that changed everything. The hands that hold the faith. The figure that is the faith. Display stand included.
Order now — and give them the board that tells the whole truth.
Anatomy of Quality
Eight pieces that move from ancient symbol to living presence — the most Christocentric baptism board we make:
- ✝️ Jesus With Open Arms — The Piece That Makes This Board Different: The bottom-right arch panel shows Jesus in red and white robes, arms spread wide, golden halo, clouds behind him — not a symbol of Jesus, not a reference to Jesus, but Jesus himself, illustrated with care and warmth, the way every child deserves to first encounter him. No other puzzle in the Kukoo faith collection includes this figure. This is the piece that parents lift out of the box first, hold up, and say nothing — because the piece says it already. “He’s always like this. Arms open. For you.”
- 🐟 The Ichthys Fish — The Oldest Christian Symbol on Any Board: The colorful Ichthys fish — orange body, teal fin, unmistakable ancient form — predates the cross as the primary symbol of Christian identity. Early Christians used it as a secret sign of belonging, a wordless declaration: I believe. On this board it sits alongside the cross, the church, and Jesus himself — the oldest piece in the oldest company. For a child who grows up knowing what the fish means, every bumper sticker, every piece of jewelry, every doorway carving becomes a recognition. I know that. I know what that means. I belong to that.
- 🙏 Two Pairs of Hands — Faith as Something Done, Not Just Held: The bottom row includes two arch panels showing human hands — hands lifting a cross and hands raising the Eucharistic host against a night sky. These are the most intimate pieces on the board: not symbols of faith, but faith being practiced — the gesture of offering, of lifting, of presenting something sacred. A child who handles these pieces is handling the same motion their priest makes at the altar, their parents make in prayer, their community makes every Sunday. The hands on this board are everyone’s hands. Including theirs.
- 🌸 Floral Cross + Pink Church — Beauty at the Top: The flower-detailed cross in pink and the pink church with bell tower anchor the top-left and top-right of the symbol row — decorative enough to be loved, meaningful enough to matter. Together with the baptism outfit and the Ichthys fish, the top row covers the four essentials of baptism day: what was worn, what was believed, what was professed, where it happened. Four pieces, four sentences, the entire ceremony summarized for the smallest hands in the room.
- 👕 Blue Baptism Outfit — The Most Personal Symbol: The blue boy’s romper with cross is the piece that is most specific to this child on this day — not the universal symbols of faith, but the particular clothing of one particular morning. “You wore something like this. You were dressed carefully, with love, because the day deserved it.” The most personal piece is also the simplest. That’s the right proportion.
- 🟡 Warm Yellow Board — The Color That Changes Everything: The board surface is painted in warm butter yellow — not the natural wood tone of every other puzzle in the collection, but a painted ground that makes every piece glow against it. The lavender and pink name letters, the arch scenes, the fish, the cross — all of them read differently against yellow than they would against wood. Warmer. More alive. Like something lit from within.
Specifications
| Dimensions | Approx. 11.8in × 7.87in (30cm × 20cm) |
|---|---|
| Material | Sustainable Plywood |
| Age | 1+ (supervision recommended under 3 years) |
| Safety Standard | ASTM F963 and EN 71 |
| Paint | Child-safe, water-based ink (certified non-toxic) |
- Display Stand: Wooden easel stand included — board displays upright on any flat surface, no additional purchase required.
- Board Color: Painted warm yellow/cream ground — all pieces contrast against the painted surface.
- Pegs: Choose “No Pegs” for a clean display look. For children actively playing, pegs are strongly recommended — especially under 2.
- Personalization: Name is custom-engraved and hand-painted per order.
How to Play: Eight Pieces, One Story, Told From the Beginning
Top row first, name second, bottom row last — the sequence that tells the story in the right order:
- The Fish — Start at the Beginning of Everything: Before the cross, before the church, before Jesus himself — start with the Ichthys fish. Hold it up. “This fish is the oldest Christian symbol there is. Before there were churches on every corner, before anyone could say it out loud, believers used this fish as a secret sign that said: I believe. That sign is yours now too.” For a toddler, this is a fish. For a child of seven hearing it again, it becomes something else entirely. The Ichthys piece grows with the child who holds it — which is the best thing a piece on a baptism board can do.
- Top Row — The Day in Four Pieces: Outfit → Floral Cross → Fish → Church, left to right. One sentence each: “What you wore. What you believed. The sign of what you joined. Where it all happened.” Four pieces, four sentences, the complete baptism day summarized in a row. Place them back in order. Say the sentences again, faster this time. Then faster. By the third repetition, the child is finishing the sentences before you do — which is exactly what literacy and faith formation look like when they’re happening correctly.
- The Name — The Dividing Line: Pop each lavender and pink letter out one at a time across the center of the board. Call each one clearly. The name sits between the symbols above and the scenes below — the dividing line between the ceremony and the living of it. “Everything above is what happened on your baptism day. Everything below is what the faith means. And your name is exactly in the middle — because that’s where you are. Between the day you were welcomed and the life that comes after it.” Place the last letter back. The name is the hinge.
- Bottom Row — The Living Faith: Work left to right through the four arch panels: Cross + Chalice → Hands Holding Cross → Hands Holding Host → Jesus. Tell a sentence for each scene, moving forward in time: “This is what the sacraments mean. This is what believers do — they lift the cross. This is what happens at Mass — the host is raised. And this—” hold up the Jesus panel last, arms open, halo glowing against the warm yellow board — “this is who it’s all for. Arms open. Always.” Set it down last. Let it be the final piece placed. The board is complete when Jesus is in his place. That’s the right ending.
- The Stand — Leave It Where It Can Be Seen: When the session ends and every piece is back in place, don’t put the board away. Set it on the stand, at the right angle, where it can be seen from across the room. The warm yellow catches light differently than wood — in the morning, in the afternoon, in the glow of a bedside lamp. The name across the center. Jesus at the bottom right, arms open. The fish at the top, the oldest sign still true. This board was made to be seen every day. The stand is how that happens. Let it.










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