Ashton Kutcher has embraced fatherhood and is opening up about his new baby girl. The "Two and a Half Men" actor gushed about his 2-month-old daughter, Wyatt Isabelle Kutcher, during his appearance on "The Ellen Degeneres Show."

Kutcher discussed how his fiancée and baby mama, actress Mila Kunis, are handling being new parents.

Host Degeneres asked if Kunis and Kutcher were the only ones taking care of the baby.

"Yes, it's just the two of us," he replied. "It's awesome. It's unbelievable."

Although the couple could certainly afford additional help, Kutcher said they'd rather not as they "want to know our kid."

"We want to be the people that know what to do when the baby's crying to make the baby not cry anymore," Kutcher said. "We want to know when she makes a little face or something. We want to be emotionally in touch with her, and I think the only way to do that is by being the one who's there."

In addition to this quality time together, Kutcher said that handling a newborn is "incredible."

"When you first get them it's, you're all excited and you're ready to do all these things," he said. "Then you realize it's like getting a new cell phone where all the features don't work yet. It's like a phone that won't take pictures and you're like, 'Why won't my phone take pictures?' And it won't make calls and it doesn't do a lot, but it looks really cute."

The 36-year-old TV star said that he is so proud of how Kunis is handling motherhood.

"The most amazing thing about having a baby is my partner, Mila," he continued. "She's the greatest mom -- I can't even! Like, I go to work every day, and I come home, and she's perfect. And it just seems like everything went amazing. And I know that something probably didn't go amazing, but she never complains. It's unbelievable."

In in an emotional response, Kutcher added that what has surprised him most about fatherhood was "how much you can love another person."

"You think you know how much you can love another person and then you have a child and you realize you didn't know. It's infinitely rewarding," he said.