If you're in need of some Easter egg inspiration, you might find a new source in pysanky eggs. This traditional Ukrainian method of decorating eggs has been around for several millennia—and crafty ...
Artist Anna Chychula, second from right, shows workshop attendees design elements in creating Ukrainian pysanky eggs at the Ukrainian National Museum. A collection of ornately decorated Ukrainian ...
Let's talk about a beautiful Easter tradition that many Americans may not know about: painting pysanky eggs! This craft is probably unfamiliar to most families, who have their own Easter egg rituals.
Traditions around the Easter holiday usually derive from some religious attribute. For many, dying Easter eggs is a cultural ...
Maria Fedachtchin’s fingers trembled a bit as she etched the first intricate lines of beeswax along the smooth, unblemished shell of an egg cradled in her palm. She’s learning to design pysanky, the ...
HOT SPRINGS -- No way the item in Lorrie Popow's palm is a real egg. No way. Egg is too simple a word. Try "ovoid." Maybe "bedizened" ovoid. And no way its intricate, interlocking decorations aren't ...
At Crisp Museum, a pysanky egg-decorating workshop taught Ukrainian wax-resist techniques, sharing the art form’s symbolism ...
With Easter approaching this Sunday, and amid the ongoing war in Ukraine, renewed interest is arising in one of the country's most celebrated Easter traditions. Think you're good at coloring eggs with ...
The Grayhaven Motel and Inlet Valley Arts Center held a Ukrainian Easter egg decorating workshop all about pysanky on Sunday, March 29 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
With every pysanky class Tammy Budnovitch teaches, she ensures that the Ukrainian craft passed down to her continues. “There are so many traditions that our ancestors have brought over that are dying ...
Colorful Easter eggs delight the eye and contribute to the joy of Easter’s celebration. The eggs that immediately make people marvel are a Ukrainian tradition called pysanky. These incredible, ...
The original Easter eggs were talismans dyed in baths made from berries and bark. With intricate, multicolored designs, they portrayed symbols of eternal life, bountiful harvests, gods and goddesses.
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