Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures

Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures

The Mid-Autumn Festival is coming, will you make a handwritten newspaper for the Mid-Autumn Festival? Below I have brought you pictures of a handwritten newspaper for the Mid-Autumn Festival. You are welcome to read it. I hope it can help you.

Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures 1 Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures 2 Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures 3 Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures 4 Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures 5 Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures 6 Mid-Autumn Festival handwritten newspaper pictures 7 Mid-Autumn Festival

Mid-Autumn Festival Handwritten Newspaper Pictures Eight Mid-Autumn Festival Handwritten Newspaper Pictures Nine Mid-Autumn Festival Handwritten Newspaper Pictures Ten How Countries in the World Celebrate the Mid-Autumn Festival Looking at the Bright Moon

Although it is the Mid-Autumn Festival in some Asian countries, the customs of each country are different, and the various forms express people's infinite love for life and longing for a better future. The Japanese Mid-Autumn Festival has different charms.

In Japan, the Mid-Autumn Festival on the 15th day of the eighth lunar month is called "Fifteenth Night" or "Mid-Autumn Festival". Japanese people also have the custom of admiring the moon on this day, which is called "Tsukimi" in Japanese.

The moon-viewing custom originated from China. After it was introduced to Japan more than 1,000 years ago, the local custom of holding a banquet while admiring the moon began to appear, which is called a "moon-viewing banquet." Unlike the Chinese who eat moon cakes, the Japanese enjoy the moon.

Although Japan abolished the lunar calendar and switched to the solar calendar after the Meiji Restoration, the custom of enjoying the moon during the Mid-Autumn Festival is still retained in various places in Japan, and some temples and shrines still have it during the Mid-Autumn Festival.

A special moon-viewing party is held. Koreans eat sponge cake, play traditional seesaw games in folk competitions, enjoy Qiang Qiang water dances, taste Korean "moon cakes" - sponge cakes, and the number one Mid-Autumn Festival food - taro soup.

The Mid-Autumn Festival, one of the three major festivals, is called "Autumn Eve" in Korean. On the Mid-Autumn Festival, Koreans have the habit of returning home to reunite with their parents. They also go to Gyeongbokgung Palace, Korean Folk Village, National Folk Museum, and Namsan Han.

Various Mid-Autumn folk activities are held in housing estates and other places, ushering in the most lively day of the year. Singapore holds a garden party during the Mid-Autumn Festival. Singapore is a country where Chinese make up the majority of the population, and it has always attached great importance to the annual Mid-Autumn Festival.

For the Chinese in Singapore, the Mid-Autumn Festival is a God-given opportunity to connect with each other and express gratitude. Relatives, friends, and business partners send mooncakes to each other to express greetings and wishes. Singapore is a tourist country, and the Mid-Autumn Festival is undoubtedly an attraction.

A perfect opportunity for tourists. Every year when the Mid-Autumn Festival approaches, the famous local places such as Orchard Road, Singapore Riverside, Chinatown and Yuhua Garden are decorated with lights.

Heart-beating. The Mid-Autumn Festival in Vietnam is the happiest for children. There are all kinds of mooncakes with different flavors, colorful lanterns, colorful children's toys and other festive foods and toys on the market. Children's faces are full of excitement about the festival.

Every year during the Mid-Autumn Festival, lantern festivals are held across Vietnam, and the designs of the lanterns are judged, and the winners will receive rewards. During the festival, the locals may sit together on the balcony, in the yard, or go out into the wild as a family.

, put out moon cakes, fruits and other snacks, and enjoy the moon cakes while admiring the moon.

Children carried various lanterns and played in groups.

Cambodia Moon Worship Festival Cambodians hold the traditional "Moon Worship Festival" in the twelfth month of the Buddhist calendar.

In the early morning of this day, people began to prepare gifts for the month. Some picked flowers, some dug cassava to make soup, some pounded flat rice, and some boiled sugar cane water. They were all happy and busy.