View allAll Photos Tagged folklore
My entry for the FEROSH Photo Challenge.
Styling credits coming in a blog post soon!
As promised, jangsungyoung.wordpress.com/2014/07/13/new-folklore/ <3
At night, the people could see the bonfires burning on the fields. During those nights, it was said that treasures were hidden under the fires. The bonfires were known as "vredeseldar", the fires of rage. Every Christmas Day, a vredeseld would burn at Klem's Hill, and no one dared go there. One year, a peasant from Välsta walked over with a steel ax in his hand. He saw a mound, and in it, he could see two dogs. Fires were burning from their mouths. Under their paws, he saw items of silver. That scared the peasant, who threw his steel ax into the fire. The fire grew bigger and the peasant ran home and told the story. That was a big mistake because you should always sleep one night before telling such a story. The peasant fell ill, but the steel thrown into the fire stopped it from burning ever again at Klem's Hill.
This Mummers English Folklore street play takes place traditionally every 26 December (Boxing Day) this performance was captured in Stoneleigh Warwickshire England.
Two versions included with & without roses marketplace.secondlife.com/p/Folklore-Fable-The-Bridge-Ho... - inworld group tags get 20% off here: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Rosehaven%20Laudanum/62/95/23
Les Gâs d'la Pierre Virante , un groupe danses et musiques traditionnelles de Vendée. Ils sont de Xanton Chassenon.
Dancer from the folkloric dance company Raices Profundas performing in a burnt out movie theater.
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Explored on 2/20/19.
© Milan Cvetanovic
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www.youtube.com/watch?v=hgXxDFvfdhM
A street candid snapped during the parade of the attendants at the opening of the International Folklore Festival in Veliko Tarnovo, Bulgaria. She was part of the Taiwan team.