Egg painting is one of the oldest and most important Easter traditions in Romania. While the tradition is common to all Central and Eastern European countries, the custom of decorating the Easter eggs with complicated folkloric motifs is more specific to Romania, especially to the region of Bucovina, where it became an art in its own right. True gems come out of these people’s hands, whose craftsmanship made Romanian Easter eggs famous all over the world.

Decorated eggs from Bucovina

Throughout the years, Bucovina has became the home of painted eggs – a territory where this art has been sacredly preserved and passed down from generation to generation. I don’t think there is a single tourist who visited Bucovina and has not bought at least one painted egg as a souvenir.

Romanian Easter eggs
Romanian Easter eggs at the Eggs Museum “Lucia Condrea”

The Art of Easter Egg Painting in Romania

Egg painting is a meticulous job that takes skill and patience. The decorative motifs can be very diverse, mixing astral symbols with vegetal and animal representations and traditional elements from the rural life.

There are two different techniques of decorating Easter eggs in Romania: by using paint and a brush, or by using wax. The latter technique is also known as “încondeiere.” Both practices achieve equally spectacular results.

The chromatic palette which may differ from region to region, incorporates a series of basic colors like yellow, red, navy blue, black and even white.

Easter eggs display at the Eggs Museum in Moldovita, Romania
Easter eggs display at the Eggs Museum in Moldovita, Romania

The most beautiful and suggestive inked eggs are those coming from the Hutsuls, an ethno-cultural group of Ukrainians who have inhabited the northern regions of Romania for centuries. This group of population who still lives in some villages of Bucovina and Maramures is unanimously acknowledged for their craft of decorating beautiful Easter eggs, which became emblematic of them.

The Eggs Museum in Moldovita

One of the best known Romanian artists in the field of egg painting with wax is Lucia Condrea, member of the National Union of Plastic Artists in Romania. Lucia, who comes from an old family of Hutsuls, learned this craft from her paternal grandmother. She exposes her “ovoid jewels” in exhibitions all around the world, and even has her own Eggs Museum in Moldovita. 

Lucia Condrea, Romanian artist specializing in egg painting
Lucia Condrea, Romanian artist specializing in egg painting

The Eggs Museum was founded in 1993 at the initiative of the artist and includes a large collection of eggs, most of which are her own creations. The eggs – which vary in design, size and symbolism – have an immense artistic value and are absolutely unique.

Romanian Easter Eggs Museum Lucia Condrea, in Moldovita
Eggs Museum Lucia Condrea, in Moldovita

Situated in one of the most beautiful villages in Bucovina, the museum occupies two levels of the artist’s home and stretches over a surface of 500 square meters. There are 56 glass cases containing almost 6,000 exhibits.

Case display at Eggs Museum in Moldovita
Case display at the Eggs Museum in Moldovita

In addition to the artist’s creations, the Eggs Museum Lucia Condrea also includes two other collections. One of old painted eggs from the Hutsul villages around, and an international collection.

International egg collection
International egg collection at the Eggs Museum in Moldovita

Looking at the amazing exhibits you realize it takes more than talent and hard work to get to this level of art. The intricate designs and poetic names of Lucia’s creations reveal a vivid imagination: Tears of Joy, Parallel Worlds, Between Dream and Reality, Our Daily Bread, the Lost Path.

Romanian Easter eggs
The Lost Path series (“Cārare Rātācitā”)

Her patterns include a whole area of elements which vary from traditional Romanian patterns and religious symbols to geometrical, astral, and zoomorphic motifs. Each egg has its own unique design, incorporating delicacy, refinement, and imagination.

Easter eggs painted with Abstract motifs
Abstract motifs

Egg Painting Techniques

Lucia Condrea’s painting technique is very interesting to watch. First she carefully chooses her eggs. For ensuring the final result many aspects of the egg are important. Like the strength of the shell, or the size of the egg. Then she drains the egg’s content so what remains is just the fragile exterior.

Easte egg painting technique in Romania
Egg painting technique

The ovoid shape of the egg requires a compositional conception that is often difficult to accomplish. So she divides the surface of the egg shell in four sections by drawing two axles.

The drawing technique starts by covering the egg surface in wax. Then she makes the design using a special tool – called “chisita” – which is made of a thin metal that attaches to a flat stick.

"Chisita" - the special tool used for drawing on the eggs
Chisita” – the special tool used for drawing on the eggs

After finishing the first pattern, she dips the egg into a light color – usually yellow. Then she puts it into the melted wax to cover the dye mark. The wax has the role of sealing the dye. As a result, the artist can subsequently dip the egg in several other colors, without them running into each other. With each dipping more and more ornamental lines appear. 

The last color she applies is black. In the end, she gently heats the egg to melt down the wax. The egg finally reveals its whole decorative beauty. 

Egg from Lucia Condrea Eggs Museum

The artist uses her own inking techniques, which derive from the traditional batik method. Her results are astounding! Although similar in style, the eggs she paints are actually very different in quality from the Romanian Easter eggs you’ll find in the stores.

Easter Eggs Origin, Symbolism and Traditions in Romania

Eggs are as much a part of the Easter holiday as the roasted lamb or the Sunday service. But before their association with Easter, painted eggs were part of a Pagan tradition related to the rituals of spring. 

From a Christian perspective, the Easter egg is a symbol of Jesus Christ’s resurrection after his crucifixion. Therefore, decorating the Easter eggs became a beloved tradition in the Orthodox and Eastern Catholic Churches in Romania, where red paint represents the blood of Jesus Christ that was shed on the cross.

Romanian Easter eggs from Bucovina
Romanian Easter eggs from Bucovina

Decorated hard-boiled eggs are always present on the table during the Easter holiday. Romanians love eating them and can hardly wait to “knock” eggs on the first day of Easter, affirming to each other that “Christ is risen!” And the traditional response they receive is: “He is risen indeed!”

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Easter Eggs Museum Bucovina

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