Vishu and Bihu Wishes With Name
Spring is the season of fresh beginnings across India, and two beautiful festivals carry that joy in their own special way: Vishu in Kerala and Bihu in Assam. If your family or friends celebrate either, sending Vishu and Bihu wishes with name makes your greeting feel personal and warm rather than just another forwarded message. In this guide you will learn what these festivals mean, how to add YOUR name and photo to a greeting in seconds with InPik, and you will get ready-to-copy wishes for both occasions.
What Vishu and Bihu Mean — and Why Personalised Wishes Matter
Vishu marks the Malayalam New Year and the astronomical start of spring. The heart of the festival is the Vishukkani — the first auspicious sight families wake up to, arranged the night before with the golden konna (cassia) flowers, rice, fruits, a mirror, coins and an image of Lord Krishna. Elders give Vishukkaineetam (a gift of money) to the young, and everyone shares sadya and good wishes for a prosperous year.
Bihu is the soul of Assam. There are actually three Bihus, but the most joyous is Rongali (Bohag) Bihu, the Assamese New Year that welcomes spring and the sowing season with Bihu dance, dhol, pepa, gamosa exchanges and lots of pithas and laru. Bihu is about community, gratitude to nature, and warm bonds between people.
Because both festivals are about new beginnings and relationships, a greeting that carries the receiver's name stands out instantly. It tells them you paused and thought of them specifically — and that small touch is exactly what turns a wish into a memory.
How to Make Vishu and Bihu Wishes With Your Name and Photo Using InPik
InPik is a free Android app on Google Play that lets you personalise festival greetings without any design skill. Here is the simple step-by-step:
- Install InPik free from the Google Play Store and open it.
- Browse the festival greeting categories and choose a Vishu or Bihu design you like.
- Tap to add your name (or the receiver's name) onto the image.
- Add your photo so the greeting feels truly yours.
- Preview and adjust the placement until it looks just right.
- Tap once to share directly to WhatsApp, Instagram or Facebook.
That is the whole process — no editing apps, no watermark hassle, no cost. In under a minute your Vishu and Bihu wishes with name are ready to send.
Tips for Heartfelt Vishu and Bihu Wishes
- Use the right greeting: say "Vishu Ashamsakal" for Vishu and "Rongali Bihur Xubhechha" or "Happy Bihu" for Bihu — the local touch is appreciated.
- Name the relationship: "Dear Achan", "Priya Ammu", "Dear Baidew" — naming Amma, brother or a friend makes it land deeper.
- Tie in the festival's meaning: mention konna flowers and Vishukkani for Vishu, or gamosa, dhol and new harvests for Bihu.
- Keep it warm and short: two heartfelt lines beat a long copied paragraph.
- Add a face and a name: a greeting with your photo and the person's name on it, made in InPik, always feels more sincere than plain text.
Best Time and Etiquette to Share Your Wishes
For Vishu, the most meaningful moment is early on the festival morning, soon after the Vishukkani darshan — that is when families are in a celebratory mood and your wish fits the occasion perfectly. For Bihu, send your Rongali Bihu greeting on the first day of Bohag, ideally in the morning when the celebrations and visits begin.
A little etiquette goes a long way: greet elders first and with respect, use their name or title, and keep group-message wishes a touch more general while personal ones carry the name and photo. Because both are regional festivals, a personalised image shows you genuinely understand and respect the tradition — not just a generic copy-paste. Making each one separately in InPik takes only seconds, so you can send a unique, named greeting to every person who matters.
Ready-to-Copy Vishu and Bihu Wishes
Pick any of these, drop in a name, and turn it into a personalised image with InPik:
Vishu Wishes
- "Vishu Ashamsakal, [Name]! May the golden konna flowers bring you a year full of light, health and prosperity."
- "Dear [Name], may this Vishukkani be the first of many beautiful blessings for you this New Year. Happy Vishu!"
- "Wishing you and your family a joyful Vishu, [Name] — may every day taste as sweet as the festival sadya."
- "Happy Vishu, [Name]! May Lord Krishna's grace and the new season fill your life with peace and abundance."
Bihu Wishes
- "Rongali Bihur Antarik Xubhechha, [Name]! May the dhol, pepa and joy of Bihu fill your home with happiness."
- "Happy Bihu, [Name]! Like the gamosa we share, may your year be woven with warmth, love and prosperity."
- "Dear [Name], may this Bohag Bihu bring rich harvests of joy, good health and success. Xubho Bihu!"
- "Wishing you a vibrant Rongali Bihu, [Name] — may your days dance as happily as the Bihu dancers!"
Make This Festival Season Truly Personal
Whether your loved ones celebrate the Malayalam New Year with a glowing Vishukkani or welcome Bohag with Bihu dance and gamosa, a named greeting shows you care. With InPik you can create Vishu and Bihu wishes with name and photo for free, and share them to WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook in a single tap. Download InPik, add a name, add a smile, and let your wishes express more this festival season.
Make it personal with InPik
Add your name & photo to Good Morning, festival & devotional greetings — free on Android, share in one tap.
Download the AppFrequently asked questions
How do I make Vishu and Bihu wishes with my name and photo?
Install the free InPik app from Google Play, pick a Vishu or Bihu design, add your name and photo, then share to WhatsApp, Instagram or Facebook in one tap. No design skills needed.
Is InPik free to create festival greetings?
Yes. InPik is a free Android app on Google Play. You can personalise Vishu, Bihu and many other festival, devotional and birthday greetings with your name and photo at no cost.
What is the difference between Vishu and Bihu?
Vishu is the Malayalam New Year in Kerala, famous for the Vishukkani and konna flowers. Bihu is Assam's festival; Rongali Bihu marks the Assamese New Year with Bihu dance, dhol and gamosa. InPik lets you greet both with a named image.