Montessori from birth is a beautiful and respectful process. Maria Montessori's observations on infants have been life changing for so many families around the world. Dr. Montessori taught us the importance of the environment to a baby's development. While there are so many baby activities that you could include in your prepared environment, the Montessori visual series of baby mobiles are the perfect activities for newborns and young babies.
The mobiles themselves are all developmentally appropriate for babies, meeting babies' needs based on their physical and cognitive abilities. They help to develop concentration, hand-eye coordination, depth perception, and other essential skills. Plus, they are wildly entertaining for babies. We have now used these mobiles for four of our Montessori babies.
The first set of mobiles are visual mobiles, meant for the baby to look at. I have made four of these -- all DIYed on the cheap!
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Montessori Munari Mobile for Newborns
The Munari mobile is the first mobile in the visual series. It can be used starting at birth.
Traditional Munari
The traditional Munari is a high contrast mobile with various 2D geometric shapes and a glass 3D ball. It is carefully balanced to float pleasingly above a baby. Hung around 12 inches above a baby, it is made to meet a baby's visual needs.
Munari Inspired
Before I had a traditional Munari mobile, I made a mobile inspired by the Munari. This simple DIY is also high contrast and slow. This has been a very big hit with all four of my Montessori babies.
Nora loved this mobile. It kept her attention from birth. And she would stare at it for long periods of time. We used it from birth until around 7 weeks when I noticed it was no longer keeping her attention like it used to.
Montessori Octahedron Mobile for Babies
Octahedron Mobile -- was the second visual mobile that I made for Nora. It consists of three octahedrons made from metallic paper (typically Red, gold, and blue) and hung at different levels. I followed the tutorial at Little Red Farm to complete it. The only thing I did differently was that I used superglue to hold the paper together. I tried double sided tape at first, but couldn't get it to actually keep the paper together.
This was the most frustrating of the mobiles to make and required several attempts before it was actually correct. But, it was worth the hassle. Changing to this mobile was the first time that I saw Nora respond to a change in her environment, which was awesome. We used this mobile from 7 weeks to around 12 weeks.
Montessori Gobbi Mobile for Babies
Gobbi Mobile -- this mobile was the first that captured my attention when I was learning about Montessori newborns. It is a mobile with 5 different balls hung on a 45 degree angle from lightest (shortest) to darkest (longest). The balls are all a shade of the same color and usually made with string/embroidery floss/yarn. I choose yellow because it matched Nora's room and I wanted something gender neutral in case we had another baby.
This mobile was very time consuming to make and took me weeks while I was pregnant. I had a lot of fun making it though and I'm happy I took the time. Nora really likes this mobile. Unlike the other two, she's much more animated with it, she talks to it, tries to grab it (it's hung higher than her reach), and laughs when it moves. We started it around 12 weeks and we are still used it until about 15 weeks.
Montessori Dancer Mobile for Babies
Dancer Mobile -- at this point, this is the last of the visual mobiles I've made. It's a beautiful flowy mobile meant to look like people dancing in the wind. I sort of just did my own thing with this mobile -- using a colorful, shimmery, reflective paper, I free handed the figures. The hung them with fishing wire and wooden dowels.
Nora really enjoys this mobile (and its the one we still use today at 4 months). This is her favorite to watch move in the mirror and not just from under it. The way I have hung the mobiles (binder ring attached to a ring that is permanently attached to a ribbon) it is easy to interchange mobiles depending on Nora's mood, the time of day, etc.
There are many other mobiles that you could choose to make and use with your newborn. There are the whale mobile, rainbow ring mobile, the butterflies and many other appropriate and stimulating mobiles. But, for us, these were the best. Now it's time to move on to the tactile mobiles -- I'll save those for another post!
Do you use Montessori mobiles with your baby? Which ones were your favorite?
If you liked this post, don't miss: How to Hang Your Montessori Mobiles