Description
Frightfully Fun Halloween Basket
Let the Halloween festivities begin with these Frightfully fun Halloween gifts scarefully selected for the recipients.
It will be fun to walk around with a spooky megaphone which will make many eerie sounds or even record your own spine-chilling laugh.
Nothing is more fun than to go down on memory lane and talk about all the past Halloween stories.
Add a special gift to your Frightfully Fun Halloween Basket:
Halloween Story Package
This “sparkly” Halloween Story comes with a large Halloween window decal, and Halloween chocolates and candies in a shiny red tube. A really fun and spooky addition to your gift.
Frightfully Fun Halloween Basket includes:
- Large window décor very nicely detailed
- Window silhouette
- Spooky megaphone
- Ghostly Spinner decoration
- 7 pc. pumpkin carving set
- Chocolate-covered orange sticks
- Chips
- Gourmet flavored hot chocolates
- Assorted Fruit candy
- Pirouline wafer rolls filled with hazelnut cream
- Assorted chocolate bars
See more Halloween gift Baskets here
Gift Dimensions of Frightfully Fun Halloween Treat Basket
Measures 8″ x 8″ x 14″.
Product of Canada
In the meantime, customers have also shown interest of the following products:
Halloween games for kids
Frightfully Fun Halloween Games They’ll Talk About All Year
Kids Halloween Jokes
What’s a monster’s favorite play?
Romeo and Ghouliet
Why do witches fly on brooms?
Vacuum cleaner cords aren’t long enough
What do ghosts serve for dessert?
Ice scream
What do you call serious rocks?
Grave stones.
What do you call pretend rocks?
Shamrocks.
The Origin of Halloween
We can trace Halloween back to Celtic festivals which celebrated the new year on the 1st of November (not 1st of January). One thread that runs through all Halloween legends is the belief that the night of October 31st was the time when ghosts of the dead returned to earth. The ancients name for this festival Samhain** and its role was to mark the boundary between the old year and new.
With the spread of Christianity, the Church emphasized All Saints day on the 1st of November. This date was also known as All Hallows and gradually, the name for the night before All Hallows changed to hallow’s eve, then hallow e’en and finally Halloween.
More about the history of Halloween
Shadows of a thousand years rise again unseen,
Voices whisper in the trees,
‘Tonight is Halloween!’ by Dexter Kozen
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