The plains of Ptujsko and Dravsko polje and the hills of Haloze and Slovenske gorice in north-eastern Slovenia attract attention for the large number of diverse traditional carnival costumes found here.
The costumes are not just carnival props to disguise oneself and become something else. Since time immemorial, people have used masks and magical practices to commune with the afterlife, demons, and ancestral spirits in an attempt to understand and influence what is happening in nature and the tribal community. Traditional carnival characters go from house to house, asking for gifts from the hosts and, in return, bestowing blessings on them. They hop and stomp to awaken growth and invite a good harvest.
The Carnival, Pust, is celebrated on Shrove Tuesday, which is always 46 days before Easter.

Kurentovanje
The main carnival in Ptuj, Kurentovanje, gets its name from the Kurent. The festival, organized for the first time in 1960, quickly grew beyond local borders and attracted carnival characters and groups from Slovenia and abroad. In 1991, Ptuj was accepted into the Federation of European Carnival Cities (FECC).
The main event of Kurentovanje is a procession of traditional carnival characters and groups on Carnival Sunday. It attracts tens of thousands of visitors every year.