Flower Gifting Ideas by RussianFlora.com

FLOWERS TO RUSSIA & WORLDWIDE BY RUSSIANFLORA.COM

Flower Sending Suggestions

Articles containing suggestions to send flowers to Russia, Ukraine and CIS for various occasions. Also contains useful information about Russian cultural differences in choosing flowers or gifts for loved one sore relative in Russia.

Back-to-School Gifts to Russia

First day of school

Summer holidays are almost over and a new school season comes knocking at our door. Even though in different countries kids go back to school not at the same time, in Russia and CIS everyone goes back to studies on September, 1. Known as the Day of Knowledge, the 1st of September is an important holiday celebrated in schools and colleges all over Russia. The day is special for everyone: school newcomers and college students, parents and teachers.

Traditionally, September, 1 in Russia is celebrated with flowers, chocolate and small gifts. We’d like to share some gift ideas for those who want to congratulate their dear ones, relatives or friends in Russia and CIS and celebrate the beginning of a new school year with taste.

Gifts for Students

It’s always exciting to start a new year at school or college. Seeing old friends, meeting new ones and learning new things are ahead of every student at the beginning of each year. The 1st of September is the red day in the Russian calendar and it’s traditionally celebrated with flowers, lots of flowers. Bright and cheerful bouquets with Gerberas, Sunflowers, Chrysanthemums and other seasonal flowers are quite popular with students of all ages. A perfect addition to a bouquet (especially for younger recipients) is a bunch of colorful balloons. They are great at making the day even more exciting. Another important back to school gift for students is a festive cake. Choose a chocolate, cream, jelly, fruit, or any other cake from the catalog – they are all delicious and perfect for the celebration.

Gifts for Parents

The 1st of September is both exciting and stressful time for all parents in Russia. It signifies the end of relaxing summer holidays and the beginning of one more year of hard work. Make the back to school less stressful and more fun for all those parents who have already started preparing their kids for school. There’s nothing to help unwind and forget about the hustle and bustle than a bottle of champagne or wine. A selection of fruit or gourmet treats is a perfect addition to a glass of sparkling wine. Beautiful summer flowers are another great option especially for women in the family. Make sure to include a little something for everyone on your list so that all recipients can enjoy the special occasion.

Gifts for Teachers

Back to school is special not only for students but also for their teachers. Traditionally, on the 1st of September Russian students of all ages give their teachers festive bouquets. Roses, Lilies, or Chrysanthemums are usually given to female and Gladiolus or Carnations to male teachers. Flowers are often given paired with a box of chocolate. If your special someone or friend is a teacher and celebrating The Day of Knowledge in Russia it’s also recommended to give them a festive gift basket. A keepsake hamper filled with gourmet treats, healthy fruit and fresh flowers is a great choice for all teachers.

Help your Russian friends or relatives celebrate the beginning of a new school year! Send them a back to school gift they will love!

May Holidays in Russia

May Holidays in Russia

If you happen to be in Russia during the first week of May you may be a bit confused as to what’s going on. The first week to ten days of May the whole country goes on spring break to celebrate a series of public holidays. Most banks, public buildings and educational institutions are closed, and everyone has time off to take a vacation or pour into the streets to celebrate the coming of spring.

Because many national holidays in Russia fall at the beginning of May, the government traditionally compile them into one long break known as “May holidays”. It always starts on the 1st of May and lasts for 9 or 10 days. This period is one of the most important and festive public holiday events in Russia. A lot of people gather in the streets to celebrate spring, take part in peaceful demonstrations, parades and other numerous outdoor activities.

1st May

The Russian May holidays start with Spring and Labor Day observed on May 1st. Previously known as the Day of the International Solidarity of Workers the holiday lost its political meaning in Russia after 1991. Some political parties and labor unions still organize May 1st demonstrations, but most Russians use this public holiday to relax with family and friends. People prefer to spend time outdoors, have picnics or barbecues. Men may give spring flowers to women, and parents may buy balloons and sweet gifts to their children to celebrate the end of the long winter season in Russia.

A display of pink and white roses

9th May

The series of May holidays in Russia end with the second most popular public holiday after New Year’s – Victory Day. The celebration commemorates the victory over Nazi Germany in World War II and honors the bravery of millions of Russian people whose heroism saved the country from Nazi invaders.

Victory Day is a sacred holiday for Russians who often say that there is not a single family in the country who did not lose someone in that war. On this day festive events are held all across Russia, with military parades taking place in all major cities, the most spectacular one in Moscow’s Red Square culminating in grandiose firework display.

At home, families gather around a festive table to honor surviving witnesses of World War II and remember those who passed away. There’s a tradition to give Victory Day flowers, usually red carnations, to all veterans and to lay wreaths at the war memorial sites.

May Holidays Symbols:

  • Flowers (especially tulips and lilacs) – symbols of late spring.
  • Blooming branches of fruit trees – a symbol of approaching summer.
  • Balloons – a symbol of celebration.

Celebrate May Holidays and save 8% off your order with coupon code* WSR19!

*valid until April, 30

Orthodox Easter Eggs in Russia & Ukraine

Easter

Easter is one of the most important religious observances of the year in the Orthodox calendar. This holiday is not just a celebration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, it brings people peace, joy, and hope. Both children and adults are looking forward to a big family feast held on Easter Sunday that falls this year on April 12, 2015, featuring numerous Easter treats including Easter bread Kulich, Paskha, and of course Easter eggs.

Easter Eggs Tradition

Easter egg decorating is a tradition shared by many cultures throughout the world, from children using stickers and vegetable dye, to professional artists creating sophisticated and elaborate designs. Though now, egg decorating is associated with the Christian Easter, the roots of the tradition go back to over 60,000 years ago in Africa and about 5,000 years ago in Egypt. The pagan ritual of welcoming spring, with the egg being a symbol of fertility and revival, was later adopted by Christians.

The tradition of dyeing Easter eggs started in the beginning of the 17th century. Traditionally Orthodox Easter eggs are dyed in red, the color that is symbolic of the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Red signifies his blood, the shell represents the tomb, and the cracking of eggs is the release and the resurrection.

Later the tradition of coloring eggs for Easter has evolved, using more complex designs and techniques, and especially spread throughout the Slavic communities, including Russia, Ukraine and other Eastern European countries.

Krashenki – Orthodox Easter Eggs Tradition

Krashenki are Easter eggs painted in one color. Initially, Orthodox Easter eggs were red, orange, or brown, and only later such colors as yellow, green, blue were used in decoration patterns. Orthodox Russians and Ukrainians used edible herbs, as well as local or exotic plants to prepare dyes for Easter eggs decoration. The first natural dye (widely used to this day) was made by boiling onion peel in water. Green dyes were prepared from clover leaves, parsley and rosemary. Yellow dyes from saffron, cumin, weak broth of onion peel and lime tea steep.

Depending on the method of Easter eggs decoration in Orthodox tradition, different techniques were called Krashenki and Pysanki. Later, the Russians and Ukrainians started to make Easter eggs either very simple or sophisticated and exclusive made of precious metals and stones.

Pysanka – Ukranian Easter Eggs

Traditional Ukranian Easter eggs, pysanka, are ornately decorated eggs that use the wax-relief method. These eggs are embellished with traditional Ukrainian motifs, including the Orthodox cross, plants, birds, and other objects of nature. This ornaments have originated during pagan times as a ritual, celebrating the god of sun and rebirth. Later when Christianity came to Ukraine, egg decorating was adapted as an Easter tradition.

The Pysanka Easter eggs are surrounded by legends and superstitions, especially as a way to scare away evil spirits. Each design and color has their own meaning. Each family would usually have at least 50 eggs on Easter Sunday to give away as gifts to relatives and friends.

Fabergé Eggs in Russia

The best known decorative Easter eggs were made in Russia by well-known jeweller Peter Carl Fabergé. Fabergé was first commissioned in 1885 by Russian Tsar Alexander III who wanted to give his wife, Maria Fedorovna a special Easter gift.

The first commissioned Imperial Fabergé egg was simple at first glance: a realistic looking egg made of gold coated in white enamel. Inside the egg there was a gold yolk, that also opened and contained a minute golden hen with ruby eyes. The hen also opened to reveal a tiny egg shaped ruby pendant.

The tsarina loved the gift so much that her husband made it an annual Easter ritual to present her a new Fabergé egg. Their son continued the tradition, commissioning two new eggs each year for both his mother and wife. About 50 unique Easter eggs (known as the Imperial Eggs) were created by Fabergé for the royal family between 1885 and 1917. All Fabergé eggs were created from gold or other precious metals, decorated with gemstones, and covered in a thin layer of translucent enamel. Each with its own unique intricate design, the tiny eggs opened, hiding a surprise inside.

For more Easter gift ideas please visit www.RussianFlora.com

How to Celebrate Women’s Day in Russia

 

International Women’s Day celebrated in the first month of spring on March 8th is a very special holiday for every woman in Russia and other Russian speaking countries. It honors motherhood, femininity, beauty, and spring. International Women’s Day is a day when men express love and appreciation to all women in their lives and shower them with love, affection, and gifts. One might compare March 8 in Russia with Mother’s Day in US, although the Russian holiday celebrates women in general, including mothers, grandmothers, daughters, sisters, wives, and girlfriends.

Dahlia BouquetInternational Women’s Day History

International Women’s Day has emerged as a political celebration to symbolize the fight of women from all over the world for their rights, equality with men, democracy and peace. International Women’s Day has been a national holiday in Russia since 1918 and became a non-labor day in 1965.

As the time passed, the political motives of the holiday were forgotten and March 8th simply became a women’s holiday in Russia and other countries of the former Soviet Union that honors motherhood, beauty, and spring. March 8th today is first of all the day of warm feelings and excitement.

Holiday Symbols

International Women’s Day is a first spring festival in Russia that’s why spring flowers became the main symbol of the holiday. Colorful tulips, pure white lilies of the valley, sunny mimosas and daffodils are the most popular flowers for the occasion. You will notice a lot of women of all ages walking around with beautiful spring bouquets on this day. The other common symbol of March 8th is an image of a mother with a child that often appears on postcards that are traditionally given on this day.

Celebrating March 8 in Russia

March 8th is an official public holiday in Russia. This beautiful spring festival is usually celebrated twice, first with co-workers at the office and then with family and friends.

Since International Women’s Day is a day off in Russia, people celebrate it at work the day before. All women receive flowers and small memorable gifts from their fellow co-workers and employers. It is also common to have a small office party with cake and a glass of wine or champagne after work.

To create the festive mood a lot of entertaining concerts and performances are organized on March 8th. The best singers and actors perform on stage with songs and poems about love and beautiful women. However, not many Russians celebrate the holiday by going to concerts. The traditional way of observing the holiday is at home among friends and family.

March 8 Gifts

Traditionally, both men and women give gifts for International Women’s Day to the women they love and respect. The gifts that Russians give on March 8th depend on several things. The first to consider is how closely you are related to a woman (whether she’s your grandmother, mother, wife, teacher, or a girlfriend) and what kind of a gift you can afford.

Flowers are the most popular gift for March 8. Tulips, yellow mimosas, daffodils and roses are not only the symbol but also the most popular choice for the occasion. Sweet gift baskets and chocolate complemented by cute plush toys are the next popular choice, followed by perfume and beauty products.

Women’s Day Wishes

Wish a happy Women’s day to a Russia woman in your life using one of these phrases:

  • Happy March 8th – С 8 Марта! [s vahs’-MIHM MAHR-ta]
  • Best wishes for March 8th – Поздравлем с восьмым марта! [puhz-drahv-LYAH-yoo s vahs’-MIHM MAHR-ta]
  • Happy International Women’s Day – C Международным женским днём! [s mehzh-doo-nuh-ROHD-nim ZHENS-keem dnyom]

For more Women’s Day Gifts to Russia please visit www.RussianFlora.com

How To Celebrate Valentine’s Day in Long-Distance Relationship

long_distance_relationship
With Valentine’s Day approaching and an inevitable amount of dinner specials and flower bouquet deals, some couples will have to celebrate their love  miles – or even oceans – apart. For many long distance relationships can be tough, and something like Valentine’s Day can seem like an extra challenge. But it doesn’t need to be! Even from far away whether you’re traveling on business, trucking cross-country, or just not there to whisper ‘I Love You’ into their ear you can still demonstrate your sweetheart how much you care. Here are some ideas for celebrating Valentine’s Day that will keep your long distance relationship healthy and ticking.
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Digital Wake-up Date

Yes, you can’t prepare breakfast in bed for your Valentine, but they can still wake up to the sound of your voice or see your loving face on the morning of Valentine’s Day. Simply ring up your sweetheart with a hotel-worthy wake-up call, skype them, email a Valentine’s e-card, post a romantic message on their Facebook wall, or do all at once to show that your feelings are always online, even when your honey is not.

Valentine’s Day Surprise

When you are far away and can’t bring your sweetheart flowers, someone else can do it for you! With numerous online florists and gift delivery companies ordering Valentine’s Day gift for your special someone is easy as 1-2-3. Choose online a stunning bouquet of their favorite flowers, compliment it with a bar of delicious chocolate or cake, a bottle of bubbly, jewelry, a cute plush toy, or any other romantic gift that will be delivered to your recipient’s doorstep no matter where they are.

Romantic Messaging

Spread the sweetness throughout the whole day by starting out with a Valentine’s Day text message: “Today, I’ll send you 10 things I like the most about you!”, or famous love poem “How do I love thee, Let me count the ways”. Then, start sending texts one at a time saying why or how much you love your significant other. Whether you choose to send famous romantic quotations or racy one-liners it should sound like you and fit your style. Spreading out your gift over time this way will make your long-distance partner feel special all day long.

Long-distance Movie Date

You don’t talk to your honey during an actual movie date anyway (and, if you do, shush!), so this time, since you are unable to go for a movie date, choose your favorite romantic movie and try to watch it at the same time. Go for timeless classics like ‘The Philadelphia Story’, ‘Gone with the Wind’, ‘Casablanca’ or modern romantic comedies. This will give you a feeling of being connected and something to discuss later on on the phone or when you meet in person.

Phone Serenade

Take advantage of the fact that you can’t be there in person by expressing your feelings in a way you will be too embarrassed to do face-to-face. Surprise them with a call and sing your Valentine a lovely song or recite a funny limerick and keep your fingers crossed it wasn’t recorded for embarrassing posterity. If you’re the brave type, you can also leave your romantic message on your Valentine’s voicemail. Depending on how well it’s received, they can save and replay it whenever your sweetheart needs to hear your voice.

Skype Dinner by Candlelight

Many couples share a romantic dinner on Valentine’s Day. With Skype – an amazing invention for the long-distance relationship – you can do just the same! You can still have a romantic dinner face-to-face, even if you can’t hold hands. Pick a time for dinner, agree you’ll both light a candle, and either surprise and choose your own meals or plan on eating the same dish, especially if it’s something meaningful for both of you. As far as intimacy (and your bill!) goes, it may actually beat that quiet table in the corner of some fancy overpriced restaurant.

Need more advice on sending romantic Valentine’s Day Gifts to Russia for your sweetheart who is far away? Visit RussianFlora.com and find a perfect gift for your Valentine for delivery to Ukraine, Russia, Belarus and around the world.

Happy Valentine’s Day!

Love Blooms Early with Valentine’s Bouquets to Russia & CIS

Valentine’s Day is Saturday, 14 February 2015! It sounds like you have plenty of time, but you know how hectic life can get. Make sure you don’t forget the people you love most, send them gorgeous flowers and delicious tokens of your love now!

They’ll be warmed by your love when you order early. As an added bonus, if you use code RFVAL15, we’ll give you 7% off gifts to Russia, Ukraine & CIS, and 200 countries worldwide. Make sure to hurry! You can save now, we’ve lowered prices 25% – 35%, but they’ll be increasing for the holiday soon.

Lavish Her With Affection this Valentine’s Day!

Romantic Bouquets Valentine’s Day Gifts Chocolate Gifts
Burst of Romance Versace Bright Crystal by Gianni Versace Her Celebration Spa Certificate Set
Chocolate Tower 101 Roses The Love Story

New Year Flowers & Gifts to Russia

Stunning Bouquets New Year Gifts Tempting Treats
Lovely Flower Basket Chocolate Tower Chocolate Basket of the Year
Winter Garden Make a Wish Superb Selection

It’s time to turn the page on the old year, and welcome the new one! Rekindle romance, spark a new flame, bring loved ones closer, and send all your warmest wishes to everyone you care about. We’ll help! Just visit RussianFlora.com and send the loves of your life stunning bouquets, decadent sweets, and sumptuous champagne gifts to ring in the New Year!

Place your order by 26 December, 2014, for New Year delivery between 26 – 30 December, or by 4 January, 2015, for delivery before Orthodox Christmas. Make sure to use coupon code RFNY10 to receive 10% off flowers & gifts to Russia, Ukraine, CIS, & 200 countries worldwide.

Order your New Year Gifts to Russia NOW and SAVE!

How to Celebrate New Year in Russia

There’s no grander holiday in Russia than New Year’s! Beloved by both children and adults of all ages this holiday is observed throughout the country with a lot of enthusiasm and joy. Even though the observance of New Year’s Day in Russia is somewhat similar to the celebration of Christmas in Western cultures it has its own unique customs and traditions.

Christmas Tree

A typical Russian family will decorate their house and set up a beautiful Christmas tree (“Novogodnaya Yolka”) not for Christmas like in so many other countries, but for the New Year’s celebration. A Christmas tree is usually decorated around December, 28 and will last at least until January, 13 (Old-New Year in the Russian calendar). Just like anywhere else it’s under the Christmas tree where children find their New Year’s gifts brought by Father Frost (“Ded Moroz”) and his granddaughter “Snegurochka”.

Russian herring salad
 

New Year’s Dinner

New Year in Russia is a family holiday. But if you get invited into a Russian home, you’re in for an amazing night! At around 10-11pm on New Year’s Eve, the whole family gathers together at a big table to give a farewell to the old year and welcome the coming one. The New Year’s festive table is overflowing with numerous delicious dishes and delicacies traditionally served during the holidays. It is a symbol of happiness and abundance for the upcoming year. Olivier salad (meat salad), caviar, Holodets (jelled minced meat), Pelmeni (meat dumplings), Herring salad, Vinaigrette (beets salad), and of course famous Soviet Champagne (“Sovetskoye Shampanskoye”) are the essential part of New Year’s celebration in Russia.

New Year
 

Kremlin Chimes

Before the stroke of midnight, Russian families turn their TVs on to listen to the President who addresses the nation with a short speech in which he reflects on the past year and thanks everyone for their support. Right after the speech, the Kremlin chimes start counting down the last ten seconds of the year. When the midnight bell rings twelve people break open the champagne bottles, raise toasts, and wish each other ‘Happy New Year!’ (“S novym Godom”). People believe that every wish that is made while chimes are striking will come true.

Fireworks

New Year’s Gifts & Fireworks

Right after midnight children and grown-ups rush outside to enjoy colorful fireworks, a big part of New Year’s Day in Russian. Beautiful fireworks are followed by exchanging of New Year Gifts. If children are already asleep they will find their sweet gifts and wrapped presents the next morning under the Christmas tree.

Santa Claus vs. Father Frost and Snow Maiden

Instead of Santa, Russian children believe in the no less mythical Father Frost who wears a long blue or red fur coat, a matching hat, and carries gifts in a large bag on his back. Unlike Santa, Father Frost drives three horses and has a magic staff that has the power to freeze everything around him. His granddaughter, the Snow Maiden (“Snegurochka”) wearing a blue coat with either a blue hat or a crown usually accompanies him and helps distributing gifts between children.

To learn more about holidays in Russia please visit www.RussianFlora.com

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