Simple Blue Wildflowers Ketubah

Posted by on Jul 31, 2015 in Ketubah Art, News, Visual Art | 0 comments

Simple Blue Wildflowers Ketubah

I consider the wildflowers that pop up in the spring to be friends I haven’t seen for a year and so I am overjoyed to spend time with them again when a request comes to feature them in a ketubah.  My dearest flowers are the Japanese dayflower, an incredible electric blue, most delicate and perched over a pale green leaf, and the spiderwort.  During the near melt-down at Three Mile Island, everyone ran out to plant spiderworts because the folk legend was that they would turn color it exposed to radiation. The flowers and I had a good laugh about that one. Anyway, this is a most simple ketubah, and please notice that besides the floral border, it’s the lettering itself that carries the day:  a variant of the Sephardi style of Hebrew lettering, the text is clean and ordered, a most beautiful design in...

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Glacier National Park Ketubah

Posted by on Jul 31, 2015 in Ketubah Art, News, Visual Art | 0 comments

Glacier National Park Ketubah

A trip to The Cirque at Glacier National Park inspired this couple to request a scenic ketubah.  The distant mountains and sky form the backdrop for the text itself, while the midground and foreground are alive with interesting flora, fauna, and mineral formations.  The wish list included fireweed (I added some additional floral pals from the park’s biome), a lake with glaciers in it, and two white mountain goats. Would you like to see the thumbnail sketch from which this ketubah developed?  Here’s what I came up with after quite a few Skype conversations and back and forth...

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I Betroth You to Me Ketubah

Posted by on Jul 30, 2015 in Ketubah Art, News, Visual Art | 0 comments

I Betroth You to Me Ketubah

The very warm colors of this ketubah were selected by the bride and groom to be carried out in the border design as well as the wildflowers wrapping the huppah poles.  Around the border are the words of the Hebrew text from Hosea 2:19 : “And I will betroth you to me for ever; I will betroth you to me in righteousness, and in judgment, and in lovingkindness, and in mercy.”  You will notice that the text is broken up so that you start reading in the middle right following over the top, and then pick up again in the middle right and read down and up to the middle left.  Why?  It’s a calligrapher’s custom to break lettering that runs all around a design so that the reader does not have to stand on his or her head to read upside-down text at the bottom! This design brings traditional imagery from many cultures together: Celtic knotwork, Persian tile patterns, contemporary north American floral painting, and the color scheme that resonates with the bride’s southern Indian heritage. Notice the very tiny tsitsit in the corners of the huppah canopy, a visual reminder of the couple’s commitment to Jewish...

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Come Grow Old With Me Papercut

Posted by on Jul 8, 2015 in Awards, Certificates, and Commissioned Works, News, Papercuts, Visual Art | 0 comments

Come Grow Old With Me Papercut

A commissioned papercut work to honor the special birthday of a beloved spouse, capturing meaningful images and text.  The background is hand-painted in multiple layers of rich watercolor flecked with silver over the deep purples and...

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Macramé Tapestry Ketubah

Posted by on Jul 8, 2015 in Ketubah Art, News, Visual Art | 0 comments

Macramé Tapestry Ketubah

I crafted this ketubah for the wedding of two men who had each been married before and had raised children in their first marriages. The details of the intricate macramé tell the stories of their lives: At the top, the designs are orderly and forming the kinds of designs that characterize traditional knotted art.  Then the patterns begin to break and shift.  Cords get cut off and move in different directions – off the path – finally to come together in a single beautiful design that remains unfinished.  The threads carry off below the paper for the story to yet be written.  At the upper right are a small round mirror as a reminder to look within, and a bundle of eight cords wound with the traditional wraps and knots of the tsitsit, a reminder of the value of Jewish practice in their...

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