Skip to content
  • Holiday Customs & Traditions When I was 12 years old, my grandmother showed me how to make a gum wrapper chain. It's as simple as folding a candy wrapper into a rectangle with two flaps, folding across the middle, and threading another candy wrapper through it. You'll end up with a zigzag-shaped garland if you perform this procedure enough times. I was continually working on it, folding fresh components out of a bag of brightly coloured wrappers that my family and friends had saved for me. When it was about 10 feet long, we hung it on the Christmas tree. My parents hung it on the Christmas tree every year after that until the paper got brittle with age and shattered into several pieces. I still have a chunk of it in a storage unit. When I moved away to college, we developed a tradition of going to the Catskills on Christmas Eve to attend my parents' celebration, and then visiting Cody's on Christmas Day.

    Information Transformation Services is endowing the clients with a stunning and impressive visual experience crafted by 3D Modeling Services. We are completely forted to offers our customers with a range of appealing 3D designs that are carefully crafted to meet with all type of requirements.

    My father's favourite dessert was apple pie, so I made one for him one year. I tinkered with the recipe to make it resemble a legendary apple pie cooked by a woman in our neighbourhood when I was a kid. It had a buttery, cinnamon-spiced inside with soft apple bits that weren't too crunchy or mushy. I imagined that my rendition would be worthy of those recollections. My father was so happy that I promised myself that I'd do it every time, which I did. Every year, the process is the same: bake pies, wrap presents, and drive to the Catskills. That is, until quite recently.

0% or .
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment