Cape Breton Post

Advent calendars a tradition

Advent calendars have been popular all over the world for many years

- SHARON MONTGOMERY sharon.montgomery@cbpost.com @CBPost_Sharon

BEN EOIN — Some Christmas traditions date back a century but never get old.

“The Advent calendar has always been a special one for me," said Carol Beaton of Ben Eoin, while showing one she made that's part of a family tradition.

“With my family, I've never missed a year, so I guess it has been close to 40 years now,” she said. “The kids especially loved it when they were younger but even the adults — the parents — when they got older.”

An Advent calendar is used as a countdown to Christmas. Most of them start on the first day of December but sometimes include the last few days of November because of the Christian Advent.

Made of everything from paper to wood or fabric, many have little windows with anything from a poem to chocolate, puzzles or games behind each.

THE TRADITION

For Beaton, the retired executive director of the Cape Breton Centre for Craft & Design in Sydney, her family tradition started in the late 1970s. Having young children, she decided to work from home on sewing jobs. Her first order was for five dozen bonnets.

“I couldn't possibly do them all by myself,” she said.

So Beaton rounded up two friends and together they created a craft company called Tinker Tailors.

“We all had young children,” she said. “It was an avenue of work that allowed us to stay home. We made things for various craft shows and would take orders.”

The inspiratio­n for the crafts came from necessity and convenienc­e. Their customers were either young parents or grandparen­ts.

The Tinker Tailor women created everything from hanging bookcases with pockets for their children's books to mitt totes designed for people living in older homes with radiators.

And then the idea to make Advent calendars developed.

“Being young parents ourselves, we got the inspiratio­n for things children would like from our own children,” she said.

Tinker Tailor partner Joan Reid, formerly of Sydney and now of Baddeck, came up with the design.

The Advent calendars were made from heavy, red canvas fabric. The women would sew six strips across the bottom, then sew down six rows, creating 24 little pockets.

They would customize the calendars for families, cutting letters for surnames out of vinyl.

Beaton always hung one for her two children. The oldest child would get the first pocket, then they'd rotate each day. Some days, there would be something in a pocket for each of them.

“It's important they learn to share, especially at Christmas time,” she said

As Beaton's parents got older, she made one for them, and later, for her mother-inlaw and elderly aunts.

“The people who enjoyed it the most were the older adults,” she said. “As they got older and not as active, getting their treat out of their Advent calendar really gave them something to look forward to.”

Now Beaton's 40-year-old Advent calendars are entertaini­ng another generation — her grandchild­ren in Ontario.

“I go out and purchase items that will fill these small pockets and I wrap them up and mail them and they fill their pockets themselves.”

Those little surprises are not much different than the treats she used 40 years ago for her own children.

“Craft things, a little necklace, a glitter pen or Christmas pencil,” she said. “You can find lots of little things.”

The last pocket — the important Dec. 24 one — was always the same theme.

“It's always a handmade Christmas decoration,” she said.

Beaton herself has never received an Advent calendar.

“I never thought of that,” she said. “I find the joy in giving.”

ITS HISTORY

The Advent calendar is believed to have originated in Germany.

According to the website doinghisto­ryinpublic.org, in the early 19th century, German Protestant­s would mark the days of Advent either by burning a candle for the day or marking walls or doors with a line of chalk.

The practice of hanging a devotional image daily later led to the creation of the first known handmade Advent calendar, made of wood in 1851. Sometime in the early 20th century, the first printed calendars appeared, followed by Gerhard Lang's innovation of adding small doors in the 1920s.

The old-fashioned cardboard Advent calendars can still be found everywhere during the holiday season.

GETTING CREATIVE

At one time, Lynne Hanson MacDonald of Sydney made an Advent calendar for her two sons out of a hanging shoe organizer.

“I decorated and numbered each pocket,” she said. “It was so easy and the pockets were big enough to put (in) toys or candy. I'd have two of the same things in each pocket. There'd be little Lego boxes, Christmas candy, Dinky cars, even mini cans of Play-Doh.”

Today Hanson MacDonald buys similar toys for her grandchild­ren who live out west.

“If they were closer, I'd make them again, as there's something special about personally picking out the surprises,” she added.

Scanning the internet, one can count many ideas people have come up with to customize their Advent calendars — from stacking and converting anything from boxes to wooden drawers or coffee cans to create a countdown.

Companies have found a way to create gifts with their products and these holiday calendars can be found with surprises in various themes from beauty products to socks, popcorn, perfumes, cheese, tea, tools and, for the bearded gentlemen, 24 days of beard treats.

The Nova Scotia Liquor Corp. has a rum calendar featuring different German brands and a two-foot-high Brewer's Advent Calendar with a German imported beer behind each of the 24 doors.

Taste of Nova Scotia offers a 24 Days of Taste Advent calendar, featuring locally made jams, cookies, coffee and more, describing it as "celebratin­g Nova Scotia's culinary ambassador­s, their hard work and amazing achievemen­ts."

Even furry friends are included in the fun. Fancy Feast has come up with the Feastiviti­es Advent Calendar, offering 24 cans of wet food for a tasty surprise for any feline.

However, this year residents of the tiny village of Abington Pigotts, Cambridges­hire, England, might have created the ultimate Advent calendar — a living one that includes 23 houses and a village pub. According to the website dailymail.co.uk, every night a new window is unveiled in the town to reveal a spectacula­r decoration.

 ?? SHARON MONTGOMERY-DUPE • CAPE BRETON POST ?? Carol Beaton of Ben Eoin holds an Advent calendar she made that has been part of a family tradition for 40 years. Although she started it for her children, Beaton said she created them for her parents as well as her mother-in-law and elderly aunts.
SHARON MONTGOMERY-DUPE • CAPE BRETON POST Carol Beaton of Ben Eoin holds an Advent calendar she made that has been part of a family tradition for 40 years. Although she started it for her children, Beaton said she created them for her parents as well as her mother-in-law and elderly aunts.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? A display of Tinker Tailor craft products from a craft show in Sydney 40 years ago, that includes the Advent calendars Carol Beaton and her friends began making at that time, on the far right.
CONTRIBUTE­D A display of Tinker Tailor craft products from a craft show in Sydney 40 years ago, that includes the Advent calendars Carol Beaton and her friends began making at that time, on the far right.
 ??  ?? An earlier style of Advent calendar still popular today. CONTRIBUTE­D
An earlier style of Advent calendar still popular today. CONTRIBUTE­D

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