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Fireworks over the river at the fictional Hoshinogawa Hanabi festival

Fictional summer festival example

Hoshinogawa Hanabi Festival

A riverside night of fireworks, paper lanterns, mountain-town food stalls, and clear event information, organized from a Minora canvas and planning document into one public event website.

2026.08.17 Sat17:00 open / 20:00 fireworksHoshinogawa Riverside Park

Sample page only. Hoshinogawa Hanabi Festival is fictional and not a real event.

Date

Aug 17, 2026

A one-night fictional riverside program from late afternoon arrival to the final train window.

Best view

Lantern bank

Food, bridge views, and river reflections are arranged as the main visitor route.

Notice

Fictional sample

All names, dates, route notes, and organizer details on this page are invented for demonstration.

Story

A small river town prepares for one luminous night.

The event story is built around the shift from afternoon preparation to nighttime fireworks. Visitors arrive while the river path is still bright, then stay as lanterns turn on and the town waits for the show.

Minora turns the initial canvas into a public event page: route details, program, food stalls, notices, and a clear fictional disclosure all live in one page.

Daytime river valley prepared for a fictional summer festival
Temporary reference image. Replace with the final uploaded festival visual.

Program

From river walk to fireworks finale

16:30

Riverbank opens

Lantern route, viewing areas, and visitor information points open along the fictional Hoshinogawa river.

17:00

Yatai market

Grilled food, cold tea, local sweets, and illustrated stall cards create a warm first chapter.

20:00

Fireworks over the river

The main show begins against the bridge, mountain silhouette, and reflections on the water.

20:45

Exit guidance

Visitors are guided through a quiet return route toward the fictional station and shuttle stop.

Festival food stalls and lanterns near a river
Temporary reference image for the food-stall and lantern atmosphere.

Market

Food, lanterns, and route cards make the page feel usable.

The event site answers practical visitor decisions: where to enter, when food starts, what families should notice, and how to leave after the fireworks.

Local food lane

Grilled corn, skewers, sweets, and cold tea are grouped near the lantern bank.

Family meeting point

A clear meeting point, rest area, and wayfinding are part of the page information design.

Access

A fictional route that still feels operational.

This section is intentionally written like a public event page, but every location and transit line is invented for the Minora example.

  • Take the fictional Kisaragi Line to Hoshinogawa Station, then walk about 12 minutes.
  • Temporary shuttle service runs from the fictional riverside community hall.
  • No on-site parking is provided in this sample route plan.
星野川花火祭の架空会場マップ

Example disclosure

This is a Minora example, not a real festival website.

This page demonstrates how a campaign moves from canvas thinking to planning documents and finally to a polished event website. Replace images, venue details, organizer data, and official announcements before adapting it to a real event.