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Onam Procession or Onam Pageantry, part of the Onam Week Celebrations in Thiruvananthapuram, held on the last day of the Onam Week Celebrations, organised by Department of Tourism - Government of Kerala.
Traditional art ensembles and martial art displayed during the Onam Pageantry. Mobile Display Platforms (Floats) are more attractive in Onam Pageantry. Art and dance forms of different States and Districts and floats (Mobile Display Platforms) of various government, public sector institutions, co-operative institutions, local self-government institutions and private firms are participate in Onam Procession.
Location: Thiruvananthapuram (Trivandrum) City, Thiruvananthapuram District, Kerala State, India.
Sanvordem Curchorem Carnaval floats parade on 4.3.2019
e-vehicles
electric scooter Rickshaw
More Carnaval floats pics and videos visit here
goa-joegoauk.blogspot.com/2019/03/goa-carnival-2019.html
Floats parade organised by Centro Social Anjo Custodio (CSAC) in association with Curchorem-Cacora Municipal Council (CCMC)
Here is our float, complete with everyone on it. We had a gay couple, a lesbian couple, and a het couple. And a minister "performing" the marriages. Our float got the loudest cheers and a lot of attention. Unfortunately our abbreviation UU made everyone think we were the University of Utah's float instead of the Unitarian Universalist's. But the good banner that read Unitarian Universalist was locked in the church that morning and none of us had keys to get it out. Oh well, it's the message not the medium that's important. Of course it was a little annoying when the University ITSELF claimed credit for the float...
Cuthbert helping out with the preparations of the Stop CSG Illawarra float for the Spring into Corrimal street festival.
This installation includes 2 of Chihuly's wooden rowboats, one with Ikebana elements, and another with Niijima Floats. Their origins date to 1995 in Nuutajärvi, Finland, where Chihuly experimented with temporary installations along the shore of the nearby river and tossed glass forms into it to see how the glass would interact with water and light.
Local teenagers gathered the drifting glass in rowboats, inspiring Chihuly to create a new type of installation with a variety of forms including the two seen here: Ikebana and Niijima Floats.
Gion Festival is one of Japan’s three major festivals. It takes place over the entire month of July.
This year, the “Ato-matsuri,” or the latter festival, is being revived on July 24 for the first time in 49 years.
The second procession will feature fewer and smaller floats than the one on July 17 for the “Saki-matsuri,” or the former festival.
Another hot topic is that the Ofune-hoko float has been revived after 150 years and will hold the last position in the Ato-matsuri Junko
procession. This year is a very special in the Gion Festival’s long history.
The Ofune-hoko float was destroyed in the great fire of the Hamaguri Gomon Incident in 1864. It has been reproduced in its original style
and will rejoin the festival for the first time in 150 years.