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<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-147501385452387600</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:33 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Fridge Magnet]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-147501385452387600</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.90</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-r3b055430c10141fbad32c4ed0ca8eea9_x7js9_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-r3b055430c10141fbad32c4ed0ca8eea9_x7js9_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-168504925716926658</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:33 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Mug]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-168504925716926658</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$16.85</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-r405fc4d41b5c4e9da85ce3177de77c57_x7jgr_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-r405fc4d41b5c4e9da85ce3177de77c57_x7jgr_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_dog_shirt-155509770289453790</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:33 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Pet Tee Shirt]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_dog_shirt-155509770289453790</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$21.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_dog_shirt-r1e782400072f4e2d9dbc112f4117d9fe_v9w7f_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_dog_shirt-r1e782400072f4e2d9dbc112f4117d9fe_v9w7f_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$33.70</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tie-r93ab46fb9ac44355954b1b36e360c583_v9whb_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tie-r93ab46fb9ac44355954b1b36e360c583_v9whb_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.90</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-ra1cf0352f4044054a4e05f1b6574447c_x7js9_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-ra1cf0352f4044054a4e05f1b6574447c_x7js9_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.90</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-r1a0a390283d14359b29fd5a26146a899_x7j3z_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-r1a0a390283d14359b29fd5a26146a899_x7j3z_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-146912656822437553</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:32 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Keychain]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-146912656822437553</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.90</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-rf6213bfa2a0f462387d6bdb70a67f8bf_x7j3z_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-rf6213bfa2a0f462387d6bdb70a67f8bf_x7j3z_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_button-r40784623408e4b66a97ebb54eb63fdd7_x7j3i_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_button-r40784623408e4b66a97ebb54eb63fdd7_x7j3i_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_button-r9c52730bf08849da9280327be0289d9c_x7j3i_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_button-r9c52730bf08849da9280327be0289d9c_x7j3i_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$5.60</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-r291a0805a08c4956b2061f7cc5d0db4b_v9waf_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-r291a0805a08c4956b2061f7cc5d0db4b_v9waf_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-217916756262378877</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:31 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Stickers]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-217916756262378877</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$5.60</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-re02e6d6f6089429190cb916aacdabe46_v9waf_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-re02e6d6f6089429190cb916aacdabe46_v9waf_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bumper_sticker-128758526995498057</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:31 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Bumper Stickers]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bumper_sticker-128758526995498057</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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	</div>
	
</div>]]></description><price>$4.45</price><media:title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters]]></media:title><media:description><![CDATA[1000s of other unique customizable Vintage Halloween designs available, <a href="http://www.jnniepce.com/" rel="nofollow">CLICK HERE</a> to visit our main site at <a href="http://www.jnniepce.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.jnniepce.com/</a>

Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$4.45</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bumper_sticker-r61fc193689794c9994c2d2da70363bb8_v9wht_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bumper_sticker-r61fc193689794c9994c2d2da70363bb8_v9wht_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235762477185404795</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:31 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters T-shirts]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235762477185404795</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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		<span class="gbb-byLine">by <a href="javascript://" id="page_zWidget12-storeLink">inquester</a></span>
	</div>
	
</div>]]></description><price>$21.35</price><media:title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters]]></media:title><media:description><![CDATA[1000s of other unique customizable Vintage Halloween designs available, <a href="http://www.jnniepce.com/" rel="nofollow">CLICK HERE</a> to visit our main site at <a href="http://www.jnniepce.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.jnniepce.com/</a>

Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$21.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r8692f9b6df1b4b7fbbcb9f0bfea67d1b_804gs_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r8692f9b6df1b4b7fbbcb9f0bfea67d1b_804gs_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$26.95</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rfca4d44f34ed4170b028a1c2cc291262_va6lr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rfca4d44f34ed4170b028a1c2cc291262_va6lr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235757232928333293</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:30 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters T-shirts]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235757232928333293</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$22.45</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rdd1799db6a9a4218992c89550984f1f3_8nhmi_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rdd1799db6a9a4218992c89550984f1f3_8nhmi_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235722501069908008</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:30 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Shirt]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235722501069908008</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$32.60</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r68db0d75ecbc4eb08d7cacc987da2c9a_8naxt_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r68db0d75ecbc4eb08d7cacc987da2c9a_8naxt_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235726674855469845</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:30 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Tee Shirt]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235726674855469845</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$20.20</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r5faeff5d982947bc8ea872378e846831_f0cj5_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r5faeff5d982947bc8ea872378e846831_f0cj5_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235730103322181354</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:30 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Pullover Sweatshirts]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235730103322181354</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$26.95</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r3eff63f0ed1d464f9f5330d8fb800188_f0cz1_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r3eff63f0ed1d464f9f5330d8fb800188_f0cz1_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$24.70</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rc015c103b76c4fb3aa0b6de00f77aab7_f0czg_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rc015c103b76c4fb3aa0b6de00f77aab7_f0czg_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$16.85</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r77789c86f39647cba045701699072106_f0cj6_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r77789c86f39647cba045701699072106_f0cj6_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$21.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r883639a555254e2998ebfe15cb7ffd08_f0cjm_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r883639a555254e2998ebfe15cb7ffd08_f0cjm_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235973735702221933</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:29 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Romper]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235973735702221933</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$17.95</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r4c99eed0e66d44d0a6beb4659511d2fb_f0c6u_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r4c99eed0e66d44d0a6beb4659511d2fb_f0c6u_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postage-172205851666652158</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:29 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Postage Stamps]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postage-172205851666652158</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$23.55</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postage-r6c535deec1f443d78acb2392645c6178_xjs8n_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postage-r6c535deec1f443d78acb2392645c6178_xjs8n_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters-rdb353835686d41c4867d62b7b3bd1f7e_xvuak_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters-rdb353835686d41c4867d62b7b3bd1f7e_xvuak_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters-r7ac695c8bf6d4f819784824eb0241815_xvuat_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters-r7ac695c8bf6d4f819784824eb0241815_xvuat_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$16.85</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-r9a7c15a0b0264defb089a102b1765480_x7jg5_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-r9a7c15a0b0264defb089a102b1765480_x7jg5_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-239112975637713806</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:28 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Post Card]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-239112975637713806</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$1.10</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-r5a4875b73af0421b85e02896e040551a_vgbaq_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-r5a4875b73af0421b85e02896e040551a_vgbaq_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-239687070259925020</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:28 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Post Card]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-239687070259925020</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$1.10</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-ra48e12fc75b841a68df37311bf946ef0_vgbaq_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-ra48e12fc75b841a68df37311bf946ef0_vgbaq_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mousepad-144692026630279701</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:27 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Mouse Pad]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mousepad-144692026630279701</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$12.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mousepad-rfe73c995050343c89419c35706db86ad_x74vi_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mousepad-rfe73c995050343c89419c35706db86ad_x74vi_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$22.45</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_apron-r2b0417c3e203419a8ef1f37d8b106e0e_v9wh6_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_apron-r2b0417c3e203419a8ef1f37d8b106e0e_v9wh6_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_hat-148090541540318933</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:27 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Hats]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_hat-148090541540318933</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$16.85</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_hat-rbfa55ed3fe2b43a5b034c78811727c5e_v9wfy_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_hat-rbfa55ed3fe2b43a5b034c78811727c5e_v9wfy_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bag-149200572681492224</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:27 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Bags]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bag-149200572681492224</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$23.60</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bag-r379b0c71785c453ea3643eb4442a0f15_v9w72_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bag-r379b0c71785c453ea3643eb4442a0f15_v9w72_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-147992855242041180</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:27 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Refrigerator Magnet]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-147992855242041180</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.90</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-r209ae3eb6bb940b3b21a69d1ed1b2cf8_x7js9_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_magnet-r209ae3eb6bb940b3b21a69d1ed1b2cf8_x7js9_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-168984182518258169</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:26 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Mug]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-168984182518258169</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$16.85</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-r29650557c460408f8d35360977c84dec_x7jgr_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-r29650557c460408f8d35360977c84dec_x7jgr_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_dog_shirt-155949860585200564</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:26 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Pet Clothes]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_dog_shirt-155949860585200564</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$21.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_dog_shirt-r3e17a5b233e3472cbd83c6c9b292aee2_v9w7f_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_dog_shirt-r3e17a5b233e3472cbd83c6c9b292aee2_v9w7f_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$33.70</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tie-r726f2726bbe24c5f901a5da54cea12ce_v9whb_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tie-r726f2726bbe24c5f901a5da54cea12ce_v9whb_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-146954667891785180</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:26 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Keychains]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-146954667891785180</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.90</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-r97ca8051e0dd42e9986ea96a81c0a68b_x7j3z_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_keychain-r97ca8051e0dd42e9986ea96a81c0a68b_x7j3z_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_button-reb631caa4ac846049f8f763cb2174be4_x7j3i_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_button-reb631caa4ac846049f8f763cb2174be4_x7j3i_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-217962270144058526</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:25 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Round Stickers]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-217962270144058526</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$5.60</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-r08a14c45536a44bba45ead01bcfea05d_v9waf_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_sticker-r08a14c45536a44bba45ead01bcfea05d_v9waf_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bumper_sticker-128967002918758108</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:25 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Bumper Sticker]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bumper_sticker-128967002918758108</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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</div>]]></description><price>$4.45</price><media:title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters]]></media:title><media:description><![CDATA[1000s of other unique customizable Vintage Halloween designs available, <a href="http://www.jnniepce.com/" rel="nofollow">CLICK HERE</a> to visit our main site at <a href="http://www.jnniepce.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.jnniepce.com/</a>

Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$4.45</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bumper_sticker-r486790818e724f6cb4c2a366d6a042b7_v9wht_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bumper_sticker-r486790818e724f6cb4c2a366d6a042b7_v9wht_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$21.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r77763e1c1c3c446e8657445d2ec8773c_804gs_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r77763e1c1c3c446e8657445d2ec8773c_804gs_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$26.95</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rf3ee7e48f5dd48d984e86f8223362570_va6lr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rf3ee7e48f5dd48d984e86f8223362570_va6lr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235633071909218756</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:24 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Tees]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235633071909218756</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$22.45</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r6e8f72361eb3453d9e3a217dd2715314_8nhmi_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r6e8f72361eb3453d9e3a217dd2715314_8nhmi_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235635382397654773</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:24 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters T-shirt]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235635382397654773</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$32.60</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r52579c4ba6e94d8884ab646ebf0ca211_8naxt_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r52579c4ba6e94d8884ab646ebf0ca211_8naxt_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235602178442872661</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:24 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Tees]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235602178442872661</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$20.20</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r224cf45e0bfd4fc590880055c532a147_f0cj5_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r224cf45e0bfd4fc590880055c532a147_f0cj5_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$26.95</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rfccc3ab62f5243f0993f985568ff7ac7_f0cz1_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rfccc3ab62f5243f0993f985568ff7ac7_f0cz1_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235609035376295678</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:24 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters T-shirt]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235609035376295678</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$24.70</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r80e107f7a13e418aa43b62bdde5f250b_f0czg_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r80e107f7a13e418aa43b62bdde5f250b_f0czg_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235612463843007187</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:23 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Tshirts]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235612463843007187</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$16.85</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rad1a4bbf1273445885d5b26a78c6ae8d_f0cj6_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-rad1a4bbf1273445885d5b26a78c6ae8d_f0cj6_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235615892309718696</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:23 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters T-shirts]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235615892309718696</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$21.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-re224890f87c5468ebcb5aca09250bebe_f0cjm_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-re224890f87c5468ebcb5aca09250bebe_f0cjm_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235581272249120960</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:23 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters T Shirts]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-235581272249120960</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$17.95</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r6b35f229a7474cc58e48b2174966ee6e_f0c6u_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_tshirt-r6b35f229a7474cc58e48b2174966ee6e_f0c6u_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$23.55</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postage-r392b43163c6244558c3f2ca05db1e8f1_xjs8n_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postage-r392b43163c6244558c3f2ca05db1e8f1_xjs8n_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters-r56c11ff14b2a485b984ac7f018287ed1_xvuak_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters-r56c11ff14b2a485b984ac7f018287ed1_xvuak_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$3.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters-r5adf53fdfb8c4a7eb44f45a6eea76158_xvuat_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters-r5adf53fdfb8c4a7eb44f45a6eea76158_xvuat_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-168317247093454625</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:22 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Coffee Mugs]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-168317247093454625</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$16.85</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-re3e3a2b7fd0446d0b8fd20ddc9853ae3_x7jg5_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mug-re3e3a2b7fd0446d0b8fd20ddc9853ae3_x7jg5_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-239320451964511035</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:22 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Post Cards]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-239320451964511035</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$1.10</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-r0e74ba3f2b5e43489e17f838bec23560_vgbaq_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-r0e74ba3f2b5e43489e17f838bec23560_vgbaq_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$1.10</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-r29e56cbe85c24c8485bab67d12af6521_vgbaq_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_postcard-r29e56cbe85c24c8485bab67d12af6521_vgbaq_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$12.35</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mousepad-rcbd3411ccafa4235be89afba511c0ccf_x74vi_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_mousepad-rcbd3411ccafa4235be89afba511c0ccf_x74vi_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_apron-154796424347728902</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:22 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Apron]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_apron-154796424347728902</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$22.45</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_apron-r3bdd8c783e104fcca35b598f9c40b97a_v9wh6_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_apron-r3bdd8c783e104fcca35b598f9c40b97a_v9wh6_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_hat-148792995881017393</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:21 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Trucker Hats]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_hat-148792995881017393</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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</div>]]></description><price>$16.85</price><media:title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters]]></media:title><media:description><![CDATA[1000s of other unique customizable Vintage Halloween designs available, <a href="http://www.jnniepce.com/" rel="nofollow">CLICK HERE</a> to visit our main site at <a href="http://www.jnniepce.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.jnniepce.com/</a>

Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$16.85</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_hat-r159d8fc899e04c3fb2ac4c1a6522daf0_v9wfy_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_hat-r159d8fc899e04c3fb2ac4c1a6522daf0_v9wfy_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>

<item><guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bag-149789045691110654</guid><pubDate>Thu, 03 Sep 2009 12:46:21 GMT</pubDate><title><![CDATA[Vintage Halloween Greeting Cards Classic Posters Canvas Bags]]></title><link>http://www.zazzle.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bag-149789045691110654</link><author>inquester</author><description><![CDATA[



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Halloween (also spelled Hallowe’en) is a holiday celebrated on October 31. It has roots in the Celtic 

festival of Samhain and the Christian holy day of All Saints’ Day. It is largely a secular celebration, 

but some Christians and pagans have expressed strong feelings about its religious overtones. Irish 

immigrants carried versions of the tradition to North America during Ireland&#39;s Great Famine of 1846. The 

day is often associated with the colors orange and black, and is strongly associated with symbols such 

as the jack-o&#39;-lantern. Halloween activities include trick-or-treating, wearing costumes, ghost tours, 

bonfires, costume parties, visiting haunted attractions, carving jack-o&#39;-lanterns, reading scary 

stories, and watching horror movies.

Halloween has origins in the ancient Celtic festival known as Samhain Irish pronunciation; from the Old 

Irish samain, possibly derived from Gaulish samonios). The festival of Samhain is a celebration of the 

end of the harvest season in Gaelic culture, and is sometimes regarded as the &quot;Celtic New Year&quot;. 

Traditionally, the festival was a time used by the ancient Celtic pagans to take stock of supplies and 

slaughter livestock for winter stores. The ancient Celts believed that on October 31, now known as 

Halloween, the boundary between the living and the deceased dissolved, and the dead become dangerous for 

the living by causing problems such as sickness or damaged crops. The festivals would frequently involve 

bonfires, into which the bones of slaughtered livestock were thrown. Costumes and masks being worn at 

Halloween goes back to the Celtic traditions of attempting to copy the evil spirits or placate them, in 

Scotland for instance where the dead were impersonated by young men with masked, veiled or blackened 

faces, dressed in white.

The term Halloween, originally spelled Hallowe’en, is shortened from All Hallows’ Even (both even and 

eve are abbreviations of evening, but Halloween gets its n from even) as it is the eve of &quot;All Hallows’ 

Day&quot;, which is now also known as All Saints’ Day. It was a day of religious festivities in various 

northern European pagan traditions,[11] until Popes Gregory III and Gregory IV moved the old Christian 

feast of All Saints’ Day from May 13 (which had itself been the date of a pagan holiday, the Feast of 

the Lemures) to November 1. In the 9th century, the Church measured the day as starting at sunset, in 

accordance with the Florentine calendar. Although All Saints’ Day is now considered to occur one day 

after Halloween, the two holidays were, at that time, celebrated on the same day.

On Hallows’ eve, the ancient Celts would place a skeleton on their window sill to represent the 

departed. Originating in Europe, these lanterns were first carved from a turnip or rutabaga. Believing 

that the head was the most powerful part of the body, containing the spirit and the knowledge, the Celts 

used the &quot;head&quot; of the vegetable to frighten off the embodiment of superstitions. Welsh, Irish and 

British myth are full of legends of the Brazen Head, which may be a folk memory of the widespread 

ancient Celtic practice of headhunting - the results of which were often nailed to a door lintel or 

brought to the fireside to speak their wisdom. The name jack-o&#39;-lantern can be traced back to the Irish 

legend of Stingy Jack, a greedy, gambling, hard-drinking old farmer. He tricked the devil into climbing 

a tree and trapped him by carving a cross into the tree trunk. In revenge, the devil placed a curse on 

Jack, condemning him to forever wander the earth at night with the only light he had: a candle inside of 

a hollowed turnip. The carving of pumpkins is associated with Halloween in North America where pumpkins 

are both readily available and much larger- making them easier to carve than turnips. Many families that 

celebrate Halloween carve a pumpkin into a frightening or comical face and place it on their doorstep 

after dark. The American tradition of carving pumpkins preceded the Great Famine period of Irish 

immigration and was originally associated with harvest time in general, not becoming specifically 

associated with Halloween until the mid-to-late 19th century.

The imagery surrounding Halloween is largely an amalgamation of the Halloween season itself, works of 

Gothic and horror literature, in particular novels Frankenstein and Dracula, and nearly a century of 

work from American filmmakers and graphic artists, and British Hammer Horror productions, also a rather 

commercialized take on the dark and mysterious. Halloween imagery tends to involve death, evil, the 

occult, magic, or mythical monsters. Traditional characters include the Devil, the Grim Reaper, ghosts, 

ghouls, demons, witches, pumpkin-men, goblins, vampires, werewolves, martians, zombies, mummies, 

skeletons, black cats, spiders, bats, owls, crows, and vultures.

BIGresearch conducted a survey for the National Retail Federation in the United States and found that 

53.3% of consumers planned to buy a costume for Halloween 2005, spending $38.11 on average (up $10 from 

the year before). They were also expected to spend $4.96 billion in 2006, up significantly from just 

$3.3 billion the previous year.

Halloween is not celebrated in all countries and regions of the world, and among those that do the 

traditions and importance of the celebration vary significantly. Celebration in the United States has 

had a significant impact on how the holiday is observed in other nations. The history of Halloween 

traditions in a given country also lends context to how it is presently celebrated.

&quot;Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF&quot; has become a common sight during Halloween in North America. Started as a 

local event in a Philadelphia suburb in 1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the 

distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate sponsors like at their 

licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters, in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses 

they visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $119 million (US) for UNICEF since 

its inception. In 2006, UNICEF discontinued their Halloween collection boxes in parts of the world, 

citing safety and administrative concerns.

There are several games traditionally associated with Halloween parties. One common game is dunking or 

apple bobbing, in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water the participants must use their 

teeth to remove an apple from the basin (to make things even more challenging, try removing the stems 

from the apples). A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a fork between the teeth 

and trying to drop the fork into an apple. Another common game involves hanging up treacle or 

syrup-coated scones by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain attached to 

the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a very sticky face. Kids can play a &quot;kill the witch 

game&quot; by drawing and coloring a witch on a large piece of paper, cutting out circles from black 

construction paper and sticking tape on the back to make the witch&#39;s warts. Then blindfold the players, 

spin them around three times and have &#39;em pin ugly warts on the witch! The player who sticks the wart 

closest to the nose wins.

Some games traditionally played at Halloween are forms of divination. In Puic&#237;n&#237; (pronounced 

&quot;poocheeny&quot;), a game played in Ireland, a blindfolded person is seated in front of a table on which 

several saucers are placed. The saucers are shuffled, and the seated person then chooses one by touch; 

the contents of the saucer determine the person&#39;s life during the following year. In 19th-century 

Ireland, young women placed slugs in saucers sprinkled with flour. A traditional Irish and Scottish form 

of divining one&#39;s future spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over one&#39;s 

shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse&#39;s name. 

This custom has survived among Irish and Scottish immigrants in the rural United States.

Unmarried women were frequently told[who?] that if they sat in a darkened room and gazed into a mirror 

on Halloween night, the face of their future husband would appear in the mirror. However, if they were 

destined to die before marriage, a skull would appear. The custom was widespread enough to be 

commemorated on greeting cards from the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

The telling of ghost stories and viewing of horror films are common fixtures of Halloween parties. 

Episodes of TV series and specials with Halloween themes (with the specials usually aimed at children) 

are commonly aired on or before the holiday, while new horror films, are often released theatrically 

before the holiday to take advantage of the atmosphere.]]></media:description><media:price>$23.60</media:price><media:thumbnail url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bag-r1b5d9cd6a1c84613b612c29f827f518c_v9w72_8byvr_152.jpg" /><media:content url="http://rlv.zcache.com/vintage_halloween_greeting_cards_classic_posters_bag-r1b5d9cd6a1c84613b612c29f827f518c_v9w72_8byvr_500.jpg" /><media:keywords><![CDATA[frankenstein, werewolf, witch, ghost, monster, candy, halloween, trick, treet, treat, boo, pumpkin, jack, lantern, bats, costume, mask, scary, ghoul, goblin, october, haunted, house, bloody, mary, friday, 13th, scream, horror, fangs, vampire, dead, tombstone, graveyard, grave, body, skeleton, skull, hallowe&#39;en, orange]]></media:keywords><media:rating scheme="urn:mpaa">g</media:rating></item>
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