Interlocking Shapes Ketubah
Each ketubah I craft comes with its own story, which makes my work a living, growing experience all the time. This ketubah was a true collaboration with three artistic minds at work! Not only the beautiful text, composed by the couple and translated into modern Hebrew by the renowned Israeli poet Nitsa Kann, but the design and color choices all came to me from the grooms. A sketch on grid paper and an envelope full of paint chips was all I needed to be off and running. At times this felt to be an Art Deco exploration, at times a dive into an early 20th Century Industrial Art style, and at times, the color palette offered me a visit to the American Southwest and its turquoise-heavy Navajo/Diné arts. Here’s a look at the process of mixing paints to match paint chips provided by clients. Scientific? Mmmm… It’s like cooking without heavy reliance on a recipe. A little more of this and a little less of that. And VERY careful notes about the building of each color. It always seems like magic, and sometimes even like...
Read MoreTrilingual Garden Ketubah
Often, after hours of talking with a couple, I receive a surprising ‘wish list’ of what to finesse into a lovely document. And this is a delightful example of that process. It happens that I’ve had a long relationship with the bride’s family, so it was a particular joy to dive in. Family traditions from both the bride’s and groom’s side brought us to an English garden, a text in Bulgarian, and Oscar, the precious elder cat tucked among the pothos leaves! In developing the design, I worked with the couple’s dozens of colors of paint chips to line up the wildflowers that might be found in a garden. The papercut design was entirely hand-cut, planned meticulously to dance with the text and painted flora, and then backed with an ombré watercolor wash to enhance, rather than box in the rest of the...
Read MoreInfinity of Love Ketubah
This couple approached me with very clear ideas – A balance of rainbow colors incorporating the symbol of infinity. Oh, and a short list of about 12 different images looking for a home on the design! Where to start? Parsing the text so it could be logically divided into two. Working with the exterior wording so the reader doesn’t have to do a headstand to read it! Choosing colors line by line, and fitting the tiny designs into some order between words! Easy! The outer band of words so complements the image of the infinity symbol that it suggested exactly how the words should be laid out. And then the rest fell into...
Read MoreTraditional Beauty of Papercuts and Flowers Ketubah
Everything about this ketubah asks to be examined for its intricacy. The couple has very specific requests for imagery in the corners, the verse surrounding the central text, specific flowers within the dark blue band, and the papercutting itself. A piece like this is an engineering experience from the get-go! What to do first and how to protect the finished areas of the design while painting and cutting other sections. Notice the delicate text cut into the upper border. It reads Ani l’Dodi v’Dodi Li – I am my beloved’s and my beloved is mine. Verse is taken from Song of Songs and is often prominent in ketubah art when the couple is married in the Hebrew month of Elul since the first letters of each of the Hebrew words spell...
Read MorePapercut Intricacy Circle over Blue Ketubah
Papercutting can be a meditative craft, especially when the design proceeds logically but is also new with each cut. Hours of delicate cutting revealed the shape of the design which was then floated over a painted wash of blues and greens with glimmering touches of gold leaf. The same blue that was used to create the background was used in the lettering, which always makes for a unified design.
Read MoreWelcome to Our Home Ketubah
The soft colors and tiny details of this ketubah speak to the desire of the couple to preserve a sense of tradition while creating a brand new ‘space’ of welcome as they planned to create a new home together. Colors, designs, specific flowers – some representing beloved family members – led us to imagine a huppah supported by strong marble columns and anchored on an equally solid footing. Each of the tiny flowers is painted as it appears in nature, creating a balanced pair of blooming containers at the base and a cluster at the top center.
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