Wednesday, March 19, 2014

Kids Haircut Games Biography


Source(google.com.pk)
Yikes! Through a mixture of travel, work deadlines and general disorganisation, we hadn’t managed to post our monthly best iPhone and iPad apps for kids roundup. Well, better 16 days late than never…

November was a good month for new children’s apps though, from Toca Boca to Disney, Clumsy Ninja to Nickelodeon, with lots of inventive, accessible apps in between.

Apps marked as ‘freemium’ are free to download but use in-app purchases (IAP): we’ll have explained in our original article how much they cost and how they work. Read on for this month’s recommendations on iOS (or click through to November’s Best Android Apps for Kids roundup if that’s your device of choice).

Toca Hair Salon Me (£1.99, iPhone/iPad)
“A reworked version of the developer’s popular Toca Hair Salon hairdressing apps with the twist that it’s your children in the barber’s chair. Well, your children, or anyone else they can take a photo of: mum, dad, nan, grandad, even the family dog (if they’ll stay still long enough for a decent snapshot).”
Get it now or read our post

Endless Reader (Free + IAP, iPhone/iPad)
“A light and entertaining introduction to sentence construction, rather than just spelling. The monsters are as charming as ever, and while the words are shorter – the app focuses on ‘sight’ words that children can hopefully recognise on sight – seeing how they fit into sentences is just the thing for early readers.”
Get it now or read our post

Nick (Free, iPad)
“The app offers a mixture of videos, animations, polls, games and full episodes of popular shows. Those featured include SpongeBob SquarePants, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Sam & Cat, Monsters vs. Aliens, Fairly Odd Parents, Victorious and iCarly, among others.”

Barefoot Me Books (Free + IAP, iPhone/iPad)
“It’s in the same vein as previous Me Books apps based on Beatrix Potter, Charlie and Lola and Peppa Pig: an app that lets you and your children read digital picturebooks, sold from an in-app store as individual purchases. In this case, the app starts with six of Barefoot Books’ stories.”
Get it now or read our post

Big Bird’s Words (£0.69, iPhone)
“An educational augmented-reality app that aims to help children build their vocabulary by looking at the text in the real world around them… The emphasis here is on food, with more than 500 words for children to find on products and labels, whether they’re at home or in the supermarket.”
Get it now or read our post

Curious Playground (Free + IAP, iPhone/iPad)
“It’s aimed at 3-7 year-olds, but very much also at their parents: it’s an app for you and your kids to use together, to create games based on the people and places that are part of your daily lives… You can create word games, turn photos into memory puzzles, and then share the best ones via email or AirDrop – Apple’s new technology that lets you ping things between iPhones and iPads.”
Get it now or read our post

Disney Classics Collection (Free + IAP, iPhone/iPad)
“A collection of digital storybooks: Dumbo, Bambi, Snow White and the Aristocats. Each gets its own story with added animation and interactivity, including musical mini-games, digital colouring, puzzles and other games. Children can personalise the app with their name and photo, and each story comes with trademark sweeping-strings music, as well as voice narration.”

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

Kids Haircut Games

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