Unique Bulgarian embroideries from the National Revival Period have been collected in a catalog by the Iskra Historical Museum in the town of Kazanlak. The luxury edition with rich images is called "Dyes and threads" and is one of the events with which the institution celebrates 120 years since its inception. The catalog includes embroideries of shirts, towels, shirt sleeves, dresses and others.
"The catalog is an opportunity to collect for the future generations examples of folk embroidery from the time of the Revival Period until the late 19th century," Venelina Ilieva, chief curator of the Ethnography Department, told Radio Stara Zagora.
She reminds that embroidery has always been present in the traditional clothing of Bulgarians, because in Bulgarian folk wisdom there is a belief that only fairies and creatures from the other world wear unadorned clothes.
You can read more about the symbolism of traditional Bulgarian embroidery in the publication "Bulgarian embroideries and their symbols" from the collection of Radio Bulgaria.
Compiled by Veneta Nikolova
Palm Sunday, Tsvetnitsa in Bulgarian (the word comes from tsvete , flower) is a Christian holiday loved and looked forward to by many, commemorating the Jesus Christ’s triumphal entry into Jerusalem. It is a moveable feast, always falling on..
Sunday after Mesni Zagovezni or Meat Shrovetide is the last day on which everyone who decides to follow the Great Lent according to the Orthodox calendar can eat dairy products, fish and eggs. Therefore, on Cheesefare Sunday before..
Diko Iliev- composer, conductor, a sui generis talent, a unique phenomenon in Bulgarian culture - authored dozens of marches, waltzes, horo chain dances, ruchenitsi and brass band music . For decades, Diko Iliev’s Dunavsko Horo has been..
+359 2 9336 661