With a laughing heart – the sun is finally shining again – it’s even nicer to announce great news today: The Easter Bunny has a full discount voucher for our online shop in his luggage! A lot can be saved until April 17th!
A little greeting from the Easter Bunny!
Everyone probably celebrates Easter differently – but for everyone it is above all the weekend when you really notice that spring has come. That alone puts you in a really good mood. Together with the delicious food, which is often available, and the sweet temptations in the Easter nest, the voucher for our online shop also ensures beaming faces! With the voucher code “ostern2022” there is a whopping 20 percent discount on all art prints in our online shop up to and including April 17th, 2022! Who can say no to that?
Even if an art print by Frank Krüger is in most cases too big to fit in the Easter basket, it is still a great gift idea for loved ones at Easter. Whether a beautiful maritime Mallorca motif, a great bull or maybe the surrealistic prints by Frank – there is something for every taste! Of course, the voucher is also ideal for treating yourself and buying the work of art you want at an extra small price!
What is the Easter Bunny all about?
Since we’ve been talking about the Easter bunny here for a long time, the question naturally arises as to why the fluffy little fellow fills our Easter nests year after year and provides a lot of fun for the little ones to look for. Here and there the story goes around that the hare was the companion animal of the Germanic goddess Ostera. She was portrayed as a blond spring bringer on a chariot drawn by rabbits. A nice story, but not true. The goddess was invented in the mid-19th century – so it’s historical fake news, so to speak.
There is also an anecdote that the Easter Bunny was more of an “accident”. According to this, a baker was not very skilful when shaping an Easter lamb and the lambs looked more like a rabbit. But that also belongs more in the corner of legends and myths. It is correct that the Easter bunny was sent into the race in the 19th century. During this time, the previously purely church festival developed into a family festival and the hare, which at that time also appeared more and more humanized in picture books, was the right “mascot” for this change and thus became the Easter bunny, who brings the eggs.
We wish you and your loved ones a happy Easter!