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Valentine's Day Gift Box

Materials Needed

  • Pre-formed paper mache box
  • Colored tissue paper, curled ribbon bows
  • Modge Podge® (combination sealer and glue)
  • Ribbon and wrapped candies for decoration
  • Glue and glue gun

Directions

  • Spray the boxes inside and out with white paint (optional)
  • Cut small squares or other shapes from colored tissue paper
  • Decoupage the boxes by spraying Modge Podge® on box one area at a time, then attaching tissue paper. When completed, apply Modge Podge® over finished surface to seal.
  • Attach a bow, candies, and other decorations with a hot glue gun or fine wire. Decorate with favorite candies!
  • More than 36 million heart-shaped boxes of chocolate will be sold for Valentine's Day. A survey conducted by the Chocolate Manufacturers Association revealed that 50 percent of women will likely give a gift of chocolate to a guy for Valentine's Day.
  • Valentine's Day is the fourth biggest holiday of the year for confectionery purchases (after Halloween, Easter and Christmas).
  • American men say they'd rather receive chocolate than flowers on Valentine's Day, especially those over the age of 50. Sixty-eight percent of men age 50 or older say they'd prefer receiving chocolate over flowers from their sweetheart on Valentine's Day, while just 22% said they'd rather have the flowers.
  • On February 14, 270 A.D., Roman Emperor Claudius II beheaded a priest named Valentine for performing marriage ceremonies despite the Emperors’ decrees outlawing them.
  • “Claudius the Cruel” outlawed marriages when Roman men began refusing to go to war in order to stay with their wives.
  • Another Roman martyr named Valentine was jailed and passed the time by writing love letters to his captor’s daughter, signed “Your Valentine”.
  • During the Middle Ages, Europeans believed that birds chose their mates each year on February 14. Legend has it that Europeans began to emulate the ornithological practice.
  • It is believed that in the 17th century, lovers began exchanging mementos on Saint Valentine’s Day, perhaps heeding the words of Shakespeare’s Hamlet: “Sweets to the Sweet”.
  • A natural aphrodisiac? As an elixir for love, chocolate has been believed throughout history to bring smiles to the broken-hearted and to prompt amorous feelings in both men and women. It is believed that Madame Du Barry served it to all her suitors; Casanova consumed chocolate instead of champagne to induce romance; and Montezuma, the king of the ancient Aztecs, believed chocolate would make him virile. In the 1800’s physicians commonly advised their lovelorn patients to eat chocolate to calm their pining.