![]() ![]() Valentine Heart Tower: Have a competition to see who can make the tallest tower of candy hearts, by stacking them one on top of the other.Candy Heart Charades: Play a game of charades using candy conversation hearts as the messages.They must mingle and pair up with the person who has the same phrase, but cannot speak any of the words on the heart in the search to find their partner. Heart Match: Separate several boxes of conversation hearts into pairs of identical words / colors.To make it a little more interesting, assign something specific for each color: favorite hobby, food, song, place to visit, most embarrassing moment, greatest fear, etc. For each candy heart they take, they have to share one fact about themselves. Make sure that no one eats their candy right away. Each youth takes as much or as little candy as they want. Candy Hearts Icebreaker: Fill a bowl with Candy hearts and pass it around the group.Variation: allow any story and award prizes for the most serious, the most mushy, the grossest, the funniest and the silliest stories. Conversational Hearts Story Game: Youth are given 10-12 candy hearts with various messages and must use them to create a story of God’s love for us.Variation: Instead of chopsticks youth must create suction through a straw to transfer the hearts. Candy Hearts Pick Up: The youth or who transfers the most hearts from the saucer to a bowl in one minute, using only chopsticks wins the game.The youth are given 5 heart candies, and from a designated distance, must toss the candy hearts onto the saucer. You may also designate different saucers as having higher point values than others. Valentine’s Candy Hearts Toss: Place some saucers on top of cups to elevate them at different heights.They were first shared at weddings, birthday parties, and other celebrations, but over the years became synonymous with Valentine’s Day. Then in 1866 his brother, Daniel Chase invented a machine to press food dye letters onto the hearts and other shapes to create short messages. PLEASE SHARE THIS IDEA ON FACEBOOK – CLICK HEREĪn american named Oliver Chase invented a candy machine that cut candy lozenges in 1847 and 3 years later a machine to pulverise sugar to make the candy. In this youth idea, you’ll get several games to play using the candy hearts as well as ideas to use the messages written on the hearts to tell about God’s Love. ![]() ![]() Candy Conversation Hearts, commonly available near to Valentine’s Day, have been around for close to 150 years. ![]()
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