Yoto
The Story
You push open the glass door of the shop and are met with the woody smell of cardboard and the faint chemical sweetness of magnetic tape, while rows of cloth-covered audio cards line the walls in soft pastels,each one a self-contained story waiting inside a cassette player, no screen to distract from the listening. Behind the counter, the owner demonstrates how to slot a card into the player with the satisfaction of a jeweler setting a stone, explaining how children can press play and travel to faraway places through their ears alone. The listening nook in the corner, draped with a quilted blanket and surrounded by velvet cushions, hums softly with the voice of a narrator mid-story, and a small child sits perfectly still, eyes closed, fingers tracing the embossed title on the card in her lap.
Visual Details
The wooden card catalogue structure mirrors how Yoto actually works; it's a curated library where parents browse and select specific audio experiences rather than an endless algorithmic feed. Putting headphones and a cosy reading nook at the centre argues that Yoto believes childhood audio should be intentional, tactile, and tied to real spaces; not something consumed passively while scrolling.
More Views
Exterior
Grand Opening Poster
More to Explore
Related Stores
Screen-free audio cards for children as a children's audio shop. The cassette version of this existed.
About the MRA Score →