Eight Words. Eight Pieces. The Cleanest Faith Board We Make.
There is a version of this gift that does too much — that fills every corner, adds every color, decorates every surface. The Kukoo™ Songbird Blossom Name Puzzle does the opposite. Eight symbols, each labeled with a single clear word, against a surface of clean natural wood with nothing added and nothing unnecessary. The child’s name in deep crimson across the center — bold enough to be seen from across a room, simple enough to belong in any home.
Cross. Holy Bible. Chalice. Church. Angel Baby. Candle. White Dove. Grape. Eight words that cover everything the Christian faith asks a child to know first. All of it on one board. Nothing else needed.
Order now — and give them the gift that is exactly what it says it is.
Anatomy of Quality
Eight labels. Zero excess. The faith vocabulary that lasts a lifetime:
- 🏷️ Eight Labels, Eight First Words — The Most Precise Set in the Collection: Cross. Holy Bible. Chalice. Church. Angel Baby. Candle. White Dove. Grape. Every word on this board was chosen for precision over decoration — Chalice, not cup. Holy Bible, not book. Grape, singular, as the Eucharistic symbol that needs no elaboration. This is the vocabulary of the liturgy, made legible for the smallest readers. A child who grows up reading these eight labels will walk into any Christian church in the world and know exactly what they’re looking at.
- ✝️ The Red Cross — The Most Universal Symbol on Any Board: Every other faith puzzle in the Kukoo collection features a cross with flowers, a cross with a heart, a cross with botanical detail. This one has a plain red Latin cross — the symbol in its oldest, most widely recognized form, the one that appears above every altar, on every Bible, at the front of every Christian church regardless of denomination. No decoration. No elaboration. Just the cross, exactly as it has always been.
- 🍷 Chalice + Grape — The Eucharist, Completely: The gold Chalice and the purple Grape cluster sit on opposite sides of the board — top row and bottom row — the two Eucharistic symbols separated and labeled individually, each one complete on its own. “The chalice holds the wine. The grape is where the wine comes from.” When both pieces are out on the table together, they make an argument that no other board makes quite so cleanly: the sacrament begins in the vineyard and ends at the altar, and the whole journey is in these two pieces.
- 📖 Holy Bible — Closed, Dark, Certain: The dark Bible with gold cross is the most serious-looking piece on the board — deep navy cover, thick pages, cross front and center. It does not look like a toy. It looks like a Bible, which is exactly what it is meant to look like. For a child who has seen their parent or grandparent hold a Bible that looks like this, the recognition is immediate and the connection is real.
- 👼 Angel Baby — The Piece That Belongs to Them: The red-haired cherub with halo and folded wings is the most personal piece on the board — not because it looks like the child (it may or may not), but because every child who has ever been told they have a guardian angel immediately reaches for this piece and holds it differently from the others. Not as a symbol. As company. This piece is not a representation of a theological concept. It is, to a toddler, the actual angel. Handle accordingly.
- 🕊️ White Dove — Peace, Perfectly Simple: The white dove in flight, labeled simply “White Dove,” is the board’s breath — the lightest piece, the least weighted symbol, the one that moves freely and lands gently. In the context of eight bold, precise symbols on a minimal board, the dove is the piece that provides relief — visual, emotional, theological. Peace among the certainties. It has always belonged here.
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) |
- Board Surface: Unadorned natural wood — no background illustration, no painted ground. Labels engraved directly into the wood below each cutout.
- Name Letters: Deep crimson gradient, hand-painted. Each letter has a smooth wooden peg for pincer grasp practice.
- 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 Labels, Read First, Played Second, Known Eventually
The minimal board means the pieces do all the work. Let them:
- Labels Before Pieces — Every Single Session: Point to each label in sequence before any piece is lifted — “Cross. Holy Bible. Chalice. Church. Angel Baby. Candle. White Dove. Grape.” Eight words, read left to right, top row then bottom row. This thirty-second ritual, done at the start of every session, is one of the most efficient sight-word practices a parent can offer a toddler — eight high-frequency faith words, in context, in order, every day. By the time they start school, these words are not things they are learning. They are things they already know.
- Cross First — The Word That Holds Everything Else: Pop out the red cross before any other piece. Hold it up — just the cross, just the label, just the question: “Do you know what this is?” Whatever they answer — yes, no, a point, a reach — it is the right beginning. Place it in their hand. Let them hold it. The cross is the heaviest piece on this board not in weight but in meaning, and a child who has held it a thousand times will understand its weight differently than one who has only ever seen it on a wall. Start here. Come back here. This piece is the reason the board exists.
- Chalice and Grape — Together, Then Apart: Lift both out simultaneously — one in each hand. “The grape becomes the wine. The wine fills the chalice. The chalice is at every Mass.” Three sentences, three steps, the entire Eucharistic chain from vineyard to altar. Place them back separately, into their own cutouts on opposite sides of the board. The distance between them on the board is the space between the vineyard and the altar — and the faith that connects them. This is the most theological play moment on the board, and it takes under a minute.
- Angel Baby — No Instructions Needed: Hand them the cherub piece without a word. Watch. The Angel Baby piece is the one that goes into pockets, into other rooms, to the dinner table. It is the one that gets requested by name — “the angel” — before the child has vocabulary for much else on the board. Do not try to turn this into a lesson. The piece is already doing something more important than a lesson. Let it.
- Full Board — Read It in Silence: When every piece is back in place and the crimson name blazes across the center, step back and read the board without speaking — take in the cross, the dove, the grape, the angel, the name — all of it on clean wood, nothing competing, nothing decorating. This is the moment the minimal design earns its choice: without background illustration, without painted color, without anything added, every piece stands alone and reads clearly. Eight symbols. One name. The entire Christian faith vocabulary a child needs first. All of it visible. All of it theirs.










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