Griffin and Dexter Munro may be the picture of health now, but that wasn't the case in August when they arrived two months early, born at just 30 weeks.
"Our boys came early so we had what was called Selective Intrauterine Growth... thingy" their mother Stephanie Harford says. "That meant they weren't too well in the tummy so we had to have an emergency caesarian when they were 30 weeks."
Their father Sean Munroe says the boys were tiny and could "just fit into your hand" with both boys weighing just over a kilogram each.
The twins Griffin and Dexter are among nearly a hundred premature babies born every month at Waikato Hospital.
"They're in incubators at that stage. They keep their temperature really regulated and they just wear a nappy and that's it," Sean says.
When they came out of the incubator the twins were lucky enough to have woollen clothes specially knitted for them by volunteers across the Waikato.
Stephanie says the knitted clothing given to her boys and hundred of other prem babies keeps them warm and enables parents to have the first contact with their newborns.
"The knitted clothing comes in even when they're that tiny, like that size, even within the first day they can they put the knitted clothing on them when they come out of the incubator and you do what they call the kangaroo care. So the skin-to-skin care with them.