Wednesday, December 31, 2025

Confetti used to be candy

Make every day more interesting. Each day a surprising fact opens a world of fascinating information for you to explore. Did you know that….?

December 31, 2025

Original photo by simonkr/ iStock

The original confetti was made of sugar-coated almonds.

Confetti usually brings to mind joyful scenes of fluttering paper strips, but that wasn't always the case. In 19th-century Italy, confetti actually referred to sugar-coated almonds and other candied foods, tossed during street festivals such as pre-Lent Carnival celebrations.

"Confetti" is originally an Italian word meaning "sweetmeats," a general term for dessert foods. Carnival celebrations in cities including Rome and Naples encouraged excess before the austerity of Lent. Revelers pelted each other from the streets and balconies, armed with slings and tubes to launch their edible ammunition.

By the mid-1800s, small plaster balls and chalk pellets were used as a cheaper and more accessible alternative to the candied almonds. Charles Dickens describes such a scene vividly in 1846's Pictures From Italy, noting that protective wire masks had become required Carnival gear. By 1875, Milan businessman Enrico Mangili was selling paper scraps from his silk manufacturing company for use in Carnival celebrations, and paper confetti quickly replaced its candied predecessors.

Amazon Prime Members: See What You Could Get, No Strings Attached

If you spend a lot on Amazon, this card could give you hundreds back every year by letting you earn cash back on purchases you already make. You could get approved extremely fast and unlock a massive welcome bonus instantly. Amazon Prime members: See what you could get, no strings attached.

Learn More

*This content is brought to you by our sponsor which helps keep our content free.

Throwing rice at weddings is bad for birds.

In 19th-century Italy, nearly all dry pasta was referred to as __.

 

Amazon Prime Members: See What You Could Get, No Strings Attached

If you spend a lot on Amazon, this card could give you hundreds back every year by letting you earn cash back on purchases you already make. You could get approved extremely fast and unlock a massive welcome bonus instantly. Amazon Prime members: See what you could get, no strings attached.

Learn More

*This content is brought to you by our sponsor which helps keep our content free.

The confetti at Times Square on New Year's Eve is dispersed by hand.

Each New Year's Eve, roughly 3,000 pounds of confetti rain down on the dedicated revelers in New York City's Times Square as the ball drops at midnight. Given the magnitude of the celebration, you may assume this to be the work of confetti cannons, but the tradition is fully manual. By 8:30 p.m. on New Year's Eve, 100 volunteers make their way to the tops of seven different buildings to assume their positions. Just before midnight, they quickly start throwing armful after armful of the recycled, 100% biodegradable paper pieces to the crowds below. It's been this way since 1992, when former Disneyland balloon artist Treb Heining was hired to organize the event's first confetti drop. To this day, Heining remains committed to conducting the operation by hand, preferring the timing and effect it gives the falling paper shreds.

Today's edition of Interesting Facts was written by Nicole Villeneuve and edited by Brooke Robinson.

 
We love to collaborate. To learn more about our sponsorship opportunities, please connect with us here.
325 North LaSalle Street, Suite 200, Chicago, IL 60654
Advertisements powered by LiveIntent • AdChoices

No comments:

Post a Comment