15/06/2026
NEWBORN HEAD MOLDING: If you ran your fingers gently over a newborn’s head you would find that unlike us as adults, the skull of a newborn is made up of 7 different bones. These bones slowly fuse together over the first couple of years of life, but not before serving a VERY important function during birth
As your baby’s head encounters the pressure if the pelvis and the pelvic floor during labour, the bones of their skull are able to shift and move to change the diameters of their head without minimising the space inside it. This process is called molding and it enables baby to protect their brain 🧠 whilst navigating their way gently through the birth canal
After birth, like this image shows, you can sometimes see the way their skull has moulded. We generally find that the moulding becomes more distinct the longer the head was in the pelvis. A baby born very quickly⏱️ may have little moulding compared to a baby who experienced a longer labour
Either way, it resolves super quickly and you will notice their head 👶🏽 returning to a round shape within the first day after birth. The fontanel on the back of the head usually closes by the time your baby is around 4 months old; the one on top typically doesn’t close until after your baby’s first birthday. Babies are born with more than 275 bones, but adults have only 206. That’s because many of your newborn’s bones will fuse with each other during those important growth years
✨Trust that your baby and body know what to do✨