Can Cooler Koozies

Koozies

Insulated Can Coolers

Insulated Can Coolers, also called Koozies, insulate your beverages in a collapsible sleeve keeping your drinks cold and your hands warm. The custom can cooler koozies can be carried in your pocket. Personalized can coolers done for the right inexpensive price. Our low minimum order makes us a favorite for wedding favors, reunions and a small event party.

Insulated Can Coolers
Can Coolers


Quantity30050010001500
1-color, 1-side imprint .53.47.41.38
1-color, 2-side imprint .56.52.44.42

Special Free Shipping on any order of 500 or more. Must place order by the end of this month.

An additional $25 non-refundable artwork charge per imprint position must be paid before work can begin.

These can cooler koozies are ideal for a wedding, a business event or a company souvenir. They're made of foam, polyester, or neoprene because these ingredients insulate the bottle and keep the contents cold.

Imprint area for your custom message on sides is 3" wide x 3-1/4" high per side. Can coolers are available in Black, White, Red, Blue, Green, Navy Blue, Yellow, Camouflage, Pink, Purple, Neon Orange or Neon Green.

Insulated Can 
Coolers
Insulated Can Coolers





Heritage Advertising, Inc.
4100 Bob Wallace Ave. SW
Huntsville, AL 35805
Telephone: (706) 374-0710
Email:



American Minute for October 7th:

American Minute with Bill Federer October 12 Muslim Turks conquered Constantinople in 1453, cutting off the land trade routes from Europe to India and China, so Europeans sought new routes.

During Portugal's golden age of sea power, Columbus sailed south along the African coast and then north to Iceland.

He heard stories of Irish monk St. Brendan sailing in 530 AD to "The Land of the Promised Saints which God will give us on the last day" and of Leif Erickson's voyage in 1000 AD to Vinland. Columbus read 2nd century astronomer Ptolemy's Guide to Geography, which described a spherical earth with one ocean connecting Europe and Asia.

Columbus corresponded with Florentine physician Toscanelli, who suggested China was 5,000 miles west of Portugal.

On OCTOBER 12, 1492, Columbus sighted what he thought was India. He imagined Haiti was Japan and Cuba was the tip of China.

Naming the first island "San Salvador" for the Holy Savior, Columbus wrote of the inhabitants

"So that they might be well-disposed towards us, for I knew that they were a people to be...converted to our Holy Faith rather by love than by force, I gave to some red caps and to others glass beads...

They became so entirely our friends that...I believe that they would easily be made Christians."



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