Vishu Greeting Cards
- De Kochi
- Mar 24, 2018
- 2 min read
Updated: Oct 6, 2024

Vishu Greeting Card – Guruvayurappan DOWNLOAD

Vishu Greeting Card – Guruvayurappan DOWNLOAD

Vishu Greeting Card – Vishukkani DOWNLOAD

Vishu Greeting Card – Guruvayurappan – Vishukkani DOWNLOAD

Vishu Greeting Card – Guruvayurappan DOWNLOAD

Vishu Greeting Card – Guruvayurappan DOWNLOAD

Vishu Greeting Card – Guruvayurappan DOWNLOAD

Vishu Greeting Card – Lord krishna DOWNLOAD
DOWNLOAD MALAYALAM VISHU CARDS

Vishu-Greeting Card – Devotional Orange DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – Nice White DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – Lime Green Fest DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – Gray Fest DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card–Grace Green DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card-Floral Design DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – Golden Flowers DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – Deep Green DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card–Heavenly Glow DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – White Flourish DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – Blue Sky DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card–Krishna Mukuntha DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – Aqua Green DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – 3D DOWNLOAD

Vishu-Greeting Card – 3D Green DOWNLOAD

Vishu Greeting Card – 3D Blue DOWNLOAD
DOWNLOAD MALAYALAM VISHU CARDS
Vishu Festival of Kerala
Vishu is the Hindu new year festival celebrated in the Indian state of Kerala and nearby Tulu Nadu region of Coastal Karnataka. The festival follows the solar cycle of the lunisolar Hindu calendar as the first day of month called Medam. It therefore always falls in the middle of April in the Gregorian calendar on or about 14 April every year. Vishu literally means equal, and in the festival context it connotes the completion of spring equinox.
Free Greeting Cards
Here are the free Greeting Cards, exclusively designed for sharing happy and love. All the designs are the property of dekochi.com and these e-cards can be used only for non-commercial purpose. Contact us for commercial rights.
Kani and Kanikkonna
The flower Cassia fistula (Kanikkonna) are of ritual importance in this festival. The Malayalam word “kani” literally means “that which is seen first” and in Tulu it means “auspicious”, so “Vishukkani” or “Bisukani” means “that which is seen first on the festival morning.
The traditional belief is that one’s future is a function of what one experiences, that the new year will be better if one views auspicious joyful things as the first thing on the day. Therefore, Malayali Hindu women as well as Tamil Brahmins with Kerala origin spend the day before preparing a setting, usually a tray, of auspicious items. This setting is the first thing they see when they wake up on the festival day.
Most of the greeting cards attached in this article contains the photo of ‘Vishukkani’.
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