Photo Printed Decorated Karwa Chauth Set
Ref ID: 1872Personalized Complete Pooja Thali set - 100% Delivery Before Karwa Chauth
- Photo printed Steel Karwa - 180-200g
- Photo printed Steel Plate - 250-300g
- Photo printed Steel Glass - 80-100g
- Photo printed Steel Chalni - 100-120g
- Premium Quality Decoration
A perfect gift on this Karwa Chauth!
You can customize the Thali, Karwa, Chalni, and Glass with your favorite photos.
Note: Printing of photos depends upon the quality of photos provide so please upload high-quality photos.
A beautiful personalized photo printed set on this special occasion of Karwa Chauth. We have used high-quality stainless steel and long-lasting printed material which we pasted with strong glue and beautiful decoration. You have the option to upload up to 4 photos and also you have the option to select digital proof ( our designing team will provide you a soft copy as digital proof before printing ).
The best item to gift on this Karwa Chauth to your wife, mother, mother-in-law, or loved ones which definitely adds a smile on their face.
Karva Chauth is a one-day festival celebrated by Hindu women from North India, four days after purnima (a full moon) in the month of Kartika. Like many Hindu festivals, Karva Chauth is based on the lunisolar calendar which accounts for all astronomical positions, especially positions of the moon which is used as a marker to calculate important dates. The festival falls on the fourth day after the full moon, in the Hindu lunisolar calendar month of Kartik.
On Karva Chauth, the married women, especially in Northern India, fast from sunrise to moonrise for the safety and longevity of their husbands.
This emotional and psychological bond would be considered akin to a blood relationship. It is said that Karva Chauth festival evolved to include celebrating this special bond of friendship.
A few days before Karva Chauth, married women would buy new karvas (spherical clay pots) and design them on the outside with beautiful designs. Inside, they would put bangles and ribbons, home-made candy and sweets, make-up items, and small clothes. The women would then visit each other on the day of Karva Chauth and exchange these karvas.