A memorial notice on a tree at night, with a black-and-white photograph of a man, written in Cyrillic script.

Requisites:

1. Orthodox cross

2. Mournful frame

3. Genre of the text: obituary notice

4. Ritual cliché & date of decease

A memorial wall with many black-and-white obituary notices and photographs of deceased individuals, some with decorative borders and labels in a language using Cyrillic script, arranged on a wooden and brick background.
A white door with blinds and a poster, a wall-mounted white cabinet, a exposed light bulb, a coiled beige cable, and a small potted plant.
Dried plants growing at the base of a weathered white wall with faded paint and cracks, on a cracked concrete sidewalk.
A tree trunk with a torn, weathered obituary notice attached with thumbtacks.
Memorial notices for multiple individuals on a concrete wall near a brown door, including photos, dates, and messages in Bulgarian.
A building entrance with multiple missing persons and wanted posters on concrete walls, security cameras, and a glass door.
An exterior view of a dark brown door with glass panels, on a concrete wall with a memorial poster and some torn advertisements.
Blue door with a mailbox, a commemorative notice, and a small street sign reading '27 Morski skali Street.'
Four torn posters on a black tiled wall, one of which features a portrait of a man and text in Bulgarian, with some peeling and crumpled papers.
Memorial notices for deceased individuals posted on a tree. Each notice includes a photo and text in Bulgarian honoring their memory.
Entrance to an old building with cracked concrete walls and a red wooden door with glass panels. Several notices and flyers are posted on the door. There is a small metal box, a street sign with the number 6, and a keypad lock near the door. Electrical wires run along the upper part of the building.
A gray metal utility door with a partially worn yellow caution sticker on the top center that has black text. The door is surrounded by a beige wall with a textured surface. There are small holes and a patch of peeling paint on the door.
Several funeral notices taped to a tree with green leaves, with a sidewalk, parked white car, and trees in the background.

Obituary posters, as part of Bulgarian Orthodox tradition, must be rigorously displayed in public spaces three days after the death of any resident. The same announcement will be reprinted and displayed at nine, forty days, six, nine months and, subsequently, each anniversary. Only from day forty should be incorporated a photograph of the deceased into the obituary poster, which traditionally must be in black and white. As long as that person is remembered, his death will be commemorated again with a new reprint. There are obituary posters that are replaced sixty years after the death of a person.

The structure of the poster must be composed of an orthodox cross in the upper central part, a frame around the full text, the news of the death, the three names of the deceased, the day of birth and death, a short text or poem in condolences, the name of the obituary author, information regarding the place and date of the funeral, and a photograph in the central part.

The places where the obituary poster have to be placed are, traditionally, the door of the deceased's habitual residence, his church and the cemetery where he is buried. However, it is usual to find posters in places where the deceased spent part of his time, or places he walked for. That is, parks, workplaces, trees or walls of transit streets.

An outdoor memorial display with funeral notices and photographs of deceased individuals, mounted on a concrete wall next to a glass door and a bulletin board with torn posters.