Hoppy New York resulted in style for the city Annual Easter ParadeFlooding the fifth avenue with a flood of colorful tonnas and wild costumes on Sunday.
The 10 block stretch of East 47 streets to East 57 was filled while the protesters adorned in elaborate outfit, it was fitted into multitude of spectators, which frequently pour from the margin to take photos with them.
“We stopped and took photos for about four or five hours,” said a man from Brooklyn, who seemed to have created a Chinese flashlight in a hat made in the form of bear.
“We transmitted it very far, it took us for two hours to get here from the block,” said the Juerguista. “We are very good, we are too rejected with the answer, but we love the happiness that this generates in all.”
Nearby was Henrietta Scholtzova, a university scientist from New York in Slovakia who was dressed in a elaborate real turkey set.
“It took me a few weeks, but I was collecting feathers for years. And finally I decided that I had enough,” he said.
“I have lived in New York for 20 years, and I have been attending the Easter and Halloween parade,” said Scholtzova. “I feel this is more creative than Halloween! I really like it.”
The parade has been a Accessory City since the 1870s And he extracts his roots from the ladies of the guild who put on his most striking outfits for Sunday Aster, walk along the fifth avenue to and from the church.
Other costumes that are exhibited this year included diffuse easter rabbit costumes, wider hats than umbrellas, brilliant interpretations of the statue of freedom, winged angels and floral helmets.
Most were homemade and tok, users, hours, days or weeks to meet.
“He took about 12 hours to do,” said Barry Brown, 53, whose head was stacked with a hat with Alicia’s songs in Wonderland that a hose of Cachimba had created in a caterpillar.
Evelyn Melissen, 55, wears a huge spring hat covered with fungi, lace and flowers.
“The hat took me approximately one week. You know, you have to make cardboard and machate paper and paint and then dry, dry,” he said.
“I live here, I am one of the rare ones that come out and dress for the Easter parade every year,”