Baby vision develops more gradually than most people expect. From the soft blur of those very first days to the clear, detailed world they can see by twelve months, it’s quite a transformation. Here’s what’s happening at each stage.
Birth: Born to Blur
A newborn can only focus clearly about 8 to 10 inches ahead. It’s not a coincidence that this is roughly the distance from a feeding position to a parent’s face. That’s all the range they need at this stage, and your face is the most interesting thing in their very small visual world. Everything beyond that distance is soft and blurry, which is perfectly normal and exactly as it should be.
4 Weeks: Light and Shadow
Around a month old, babies start to pick up on contrast. High contrast shapes, particularly black and white with bold outlines, are the most captivating things they can see at this stage. They also begin to track slow movement, which is why a face moving gently side to side tends to hold their attention. Brightly coloured toys are less useful than you’d think at this point — the contrast matters more than the colour.
8 Weeks: Colour Begins
Colour vision starts to develop around six to eight weeks, and red is typically the first hue to appear with any clarity. Until now, the world has been largely grey and muted. As colour vision comes in, things start to look more distinct and interesting, which often coincides with babies becoming noticeably more alert and engaged with their surroundings.
5 Months: The Grab and Miss Phase
By around five months, depth perception has improved enough that baby can start to judge where things are in space — and they want to reach for them. This is the phase of enthusiastic grabbing that doesn’t always connect. They’re learning to coordinate what they see with what their hands do, which takes quite a bit of practice. Your face, glasses, and hair are all fair game during this stage.
12 Months: A Clearer World
By their first birthday, vision is close to fully developed. Baby can see across the room, recognise familiar faces from a distance, track moving objects with ease, and take in colour and detail much as an adult would. It’s a long way from where they started.
If you’re a Baby Club member, you’ll likely notice these visual leaps during your sessions too, particularly that grabby phase, which I can confirm is very real and very entertaining from behind a camera.



