A steady stream of celebrants made their way to a hill in the centre of Pyongyang where a giant bronze statue of Kim Il-Sung, founder of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and the family dynasty, looks out over the capital, arm outstretched.
Beside him stands an effigy of his heir Kim Jong-Il, whose youngest son Kim Jong-Un now leads the country, and whose first-born, playboy and occasional regime critic Kim Jong-Nam, was murdered in Malaysia this week, with Seoul blaming two female North Korean agents.
"The great president Kim Il-Sung and great leader Kim Jong-Il will always be with us," read ribbons attached to the baskets.
Retired financial official Kim Myong-Hui said she made hers herself.
"It is the birthday of our great leader," the 51-year-old told AFP, her voice trembling. "We come to the hill to pay our respects every year because comrade Kim Jong-Il lives eternally in the hearts of the people.
North Korea's official media have made no mention of Kim Jong-Nam's killing in Malaysia and it is unlikely many of the attendees will have been aware of it.
Some were in organised groups, many were family outings because the Day of the Shining Star, as February 16 is known, is the start of a two-day public holiday in the North and a popular time to wed.
"We came here to show the great president and great comrade first that we have become a married couple," said Kang Un-Chol, 31.
Both wore badges depicting the two Kims on their wedding clothes.
Accounts differ as to where and when Kim Jong-Il was born.
Officially, he came into the world on the slopes of Mount Paektu, the spiritual birthplace of the Korean nation, in 1942, which would make Thursday the 75th anniversary of the event.
But according to independent historians he was actually born a year earlier and in the Soviet Union, where his father was in exile.
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