Maria Montessori had a point, a hundred years ago: children learn by doing, not by watching. We took that idea seriously, then we asked a harder question — why, in 2026, are modern homes still designed to keep children out?
FoxiZ isn't a Montessori brand. We don't sell method, we sell tools. Concrete, safe, foldable objects that let an 18-month-old wash a plate, a 2-year-old help prepare breakfast, a 3-year-old put away their own cup. We call this Active Independence. It's not a philosophy. It's what happens when you remove the physical obstacles that stop children from participating in their own lives.
No gadgets. No screens. No overpromising. Just well-built wooden furniture, sized for small humans, engineered to last until the next sibling uses it too.