and the following day — Purnima or Rangwali Holi — is when the full Festival of Colors calls for throwing pigmented powder, spraying water guns, and dancing in the streets. The color festival ...
the main portion of the festival, Rangwali Holi, is observed. Those taking part in the festivities cover each other in gulal, ...
Holi is a two-day festival, it is on the second day that people gather to throw brightly coloured powder on each other. The coloured powder is called gulal. It is believed that this tradition came ...
Holi is celebrated in the Indian month of Phalgun (March). Originally an agricultural festival, it ushers in the arrival of spring, the season of hope and joy. People imitate the colors of spring by ...
In the Midwest, late March is marked by bare trees, melting lakes, mud puddles and slush all begging to be punctuated by a bud on a tree or a sprig of grass. The Holi festival is ...
Yellow is one of the most popular colors thrown during Holi. Called gulal, the fine powder is made from a mixture of starch and dyes. One factory in India, Radha Kishan Color World, produces 2,000 ...
More than 14,000 people attended the first Holi celebration of the year in the Auckland town of Kumeu on Sunday.
A special event was organised at Sri Krishna Janmsthan, believed to be the birth place of Lord Krishna, on Sunday.
Holi is a festival that's celebrated all over the world. But what is it and why do people celebrate it? It’s a two-day Hindu festival that originates in India. On the first day, people will ...
Millions of Indians are celebrating Holi - the festival of colours - amid a sharp dip in Covid-19 cases in the country. The festival saw restricted celebrations last year due to the pandemic.