Newsroom for JournalistsNewsroom Home
Current News
Holidays & Occasions
Products
People Behind Our Products
Multimedia Library
Media Contacts
E-News Alerts
Sign up for Hallmark email news alerts, holiday facts and more.

New Year's Eve

Always observed on December 31

Facts
New Year’s cards provide an alternative for people who missed the opportunity to send Christmas cards, but still want to send their good wishes to family and friends.
“Auld Lang Syne” is the traditional song sung at the stroke of midnight Jan. 1. The song, which means “old long since” or roughly “the good old days,” was written by poet Robert Burns in 1788.
Hallmark made its first New Year’s cards in 1915.

2008 Product Features

  • Hallmark offers 113 New Year card designs. This includes individual cards and multi-card packages. The line also includes thank-you cards for holiday gifts.

  • New Year’s cards help keep the holiday spirit alive for many people with celebratory, cheerful, and personal messages.

  • Card designs include festive, celebratory themes and nature-oriented winter scenes. Editorial themes reflect peacefulness and new beginnings.

  • The line includes both secular and religious cards, with some featuring inspirational tones and others using light-hearted humor.

  • Party Express From Hallmark offers a full line of New Year paper partyware. The festive black, gold and silver pattern includes plates, cups, napkins, a table cover, cone hats, horns and party invitations. Humorous cocktail napkins also add life to the party.

Holiday History

New Year's Day is the oldest and most universal holiday. Throughout early history, annual harvests provided a primitive way to keep track of years. The end of the harvest marked the beginning of a new year. It was generally celebrated in March on the vernal equinox when the sun crosses the equator in the spring and when night and day are of equal length everywhere.

The Romans were the first to observe Jan. 1 as New Year's Day in 153 B.C., according to Hallmark research. Julius Caesar developed the Julian calendar in 45 B.C., retaining Jan. 1 as the beginning of the new year. In 1582, Pope Gregory XIII instituted the Gregorian calendar still in use today, keeping Jan. 1 as New Year's Day.

In Stores

Available at Hallmark Gold Crown® stores nationwide and wherever Hallmark products are sold. Use the store locator on Hallmark.com to find the nearest Hallmark Gold Crown store.