Podcast in English
Text size
Bulgarian National Radio © 2025 All Rights Reserved

Happy Granny Marta! A Happy new beginning!

How to make martenitsas with the folklore embroidery of national costumes



Today is the day on which, here in Bulgaria, we banish winter to make way for spring. And we do it with a symbol we pin onto our clothes – the martenitsa. The roots of the red-and-white health amulet go back to the distant past. The martenitsa is connected with the figure of Granny Marta – an old woman who comes on the first day of March to bring humans and domestic animals martenitsas. This ancient tradition is very much alive today, bringing joy to young and old. From the early hours on 1 March we start saying “Happy Granny Marta!” to one another, which can be interpreted as “Happy coming of spring, of a new beginning and hope!”

The simple red and white intertwined threads have been given all kinds of creative interpretations, though the symbolism has not changed. Genoveva Kalushkova from Sofia subscribes to the idea of adding more beauty and originality to the traditional martenitsas. With the same amount of patience and love she makes martenitas as well as the traditional Bulgarian embroidery, and when she combines the two the result is a veritable gem.



“People are very happy to see these martenitsas. They like them because we are Bulgarian and we keep the tradition. The patterns on the embroidery of my martenitsas are different, but most often it is the elbetitsa. It brings together the male with the feminine forces – the colours white and red are also such symbols. It was once thought that the colour red warded off magic spells. Green is also part of the embroidery – a symbol of eternal life, of nature, yellow is the symbol of the sun, of the fire and light we cannot do without. These are the principal colours of the embroidery. I use cotton thread, the kind used to make traditional Bulgarian clothing.”



Genoveva’s martenitsas are mostly made for friends, acquaintances and connoisseurs, because she embroiders them in her spare time.



“I put in a lot of feeling in each one, and that matters very much to the people these embroideries reach. The first thing I do on 1 March is to pin a martenitsa on my husband and son’s clothes, then I take martenitsas to work to give to my coworkers, something  that brings happiness into our lives. I have sent martenitsas I have made to France, to Germany, Latvia, to lots of different places where there are Bulgarians living. And everywhere they go, these martenitsas bring joy as a souvenir with a personal message, a way not to forget Bulgaria.” 

More from category

The BNR’s QSL cards for 2025 present the beauty of Bulgaria

Dear friends, we are happy to announce that the Bulgarian National Radio’s QSL cards for 2025 are now available. The two series – one with 6 postcards and the other with 12 postcards – are entitled "The Beauty of Bulgaria." The series of 6 cards..

published on 1/21/25 10:12 AM
Screening of a science documentary on an aviation theme in front of museum visitors

Airplanes, seaplanes and space food – stories from the skies collected in the Aviation Museum near Plovdiv

From the first attempts to fly with homemade wings back in the 19th century, to the world's first combat flights with reconnaissance and bombing purposes. From the first successful landing of an airplane with a stopped engine in history, to the world's..

published on 1/20/25 12:48 PM

Ancient ritual "Bathing" to be recreated in Kula

On the night of 19-20 January - the celebration of Yordanovden (Epiphany) and Ivanovden (St. John's Day) in the Julian calendar - the northwestern town of Kula will host the traditional "Kapachi" ("Bathing") ritual. This is a unique event, with a..

published on 1/19/25 8:15 AM