3, 2, 1 .... Christmas!
And what will shorten and sweeten the waiting time? Our calendar innovation and Promotional Gift Award winner: the annual calendar with combined Advent calendar. Only one-time shipping costs and shipping as a large letter is possible, three-month division, detachable Advent calendar, filled with Lindt Naps, made entirely of paper and fully customisable from 250 pieces.Absolutely indispensable, because it offers so many advantages and is guaranteed to be your customers' first calendar. Save on shipping, reduce emissions, be the first in the office and, with your own monthly calendar, not only place your brand with the customer at the beginning of the year, but also sweeten the Christmas season beforehand? Quadruple check with our calendar innovation and winner of the Promotional Gift Award 2022!
After the sweetened Christmas season, the Advent calendar with its empty doors can be easily detached thanks to the perforation, leaving behind a monthly calendar in the usual stylish design. And why take it down when the calendars of your potential competitors will be arriving first?
This 2-in-1 innovation not only scores double points in terms of its function, but also in terms of sustainability. Sending two calendars at once halves the postage and, above all, the resulting emissions. At the same time, the calendar is a certified climate-neutral production without long transport routes and made in Germany. Thanks to mono-material paper, the calendar is completely recyclable.
But what is the origin of the Advent calendar? For most people, the Advent calendar is just as much a part of Christmas as a Christmas tree, but did you know that the history of the Advent calendar began in 1838? Back then, the director of a Protestant children's home, Johann Heinrich Wichern, wanted to shorten the time until Christmas for the children. He put 20 small red candles and four large white candles in a wagon wheel and every day a child was allowed to light a candle to sing Advent carols. The large candles were intended for the Advent Sundays. Johann Heinrich Wichern thus created two traditions: the Advent calendar and the Advent wreath.