Standard Delivery (Signed for) | Delivered within 3-5 working days |
Express Delivery (Standard Parcels) | Delivered within 1-2 working days |
Extra-Large Parcels (Signed for) | Delivered within 3-5 working days |
Furniture | Delivery usually takes place within 2 weeks. |
Free Shipping
Decor Outdoor offers free regular shipping on all orders shipped to residential or commercial addresses within the contiguous United States. Orders are delivered Monday through Friday (excluding holidays).Drop Shipping
We are an online-only luxury furniture and lighting boutique, and do not have a warehouse. Consequently, all orders are drop shipped directly from our manufacturers to your door. If your order includes items from more than one manufacturer, you will receive multiple deliveries. Because we are dependent on the on-hand inventory of our manufacturing partners, some items listed on our site may not actually be available right away. Please call us at 888.784.4644 or via our contact form with any stocking questions and we'll get in touch with the appropriate manufacturer for answers, before you place your order.Ground Shipping
Small parcel items ship regular ground via delivery services such as FedEx, UPS or DHL. Orders typically take 2-3 business days to process and in-stock items will usually be delivered 3-5 days from the date that they ship (depending on origin and destination). If there is a delay, you will be notified by email. No signature is required for standard ground shipping, so you may want to make arrangements to have packages brought inside soon after delivery, if you are unable to receive it in person.Description
The label for Pelotón de la Muerte is the flag “The Doliente Hidalgo”, is the banner that represented the insurgent army call “The scuadron of death”, that seeked revenge for the murder ot the priest Miguel Hidalgo y Costilla. The red in the flag represents the blood of the leader, the black cross represents the mourning for the priest Dolores, the bones honor his remains.
Miguel Hidalgo was executed by a firing squad in 1811, decapitated, and taken to the Alhondiga de las Granaditas, in Guanajuato, where it was hung on exhibition. Not until 1821, when the heroic Trigarante Army was able to declare independence, when the head was retired from this place and reunited with his remains, to be able to give him a proper funeral. The flag was plastered on the mural that was painted by a native from Coyoacan, Juan O’Gorman in the Castle of Chapultepec, which he called “Retablo de la Independencia”
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