Mon, Oct 13, 2008

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Jewcy Book Club

Welcome Authors
Brian Frazer
&
Mike Edison
who are posting all week.
Coming up:
  • 10/13:
    Rabbi Levi Brackman and Sam Jaffe
  • 10/20:
    Jonathan Garfinkel
  • 10/20:
    Rabbi Robert Levine
  • 10/27:
    Danit Brown
  • 10/27:
    Joshua Henkin
  • 11/03:
    Craig Glazer
  • 11/10:
    Max Gross
  • 11/17:
    Seth Greenland

FAITHHACKER
The Right Ketubah

Another Choice: Caplan's Rothko DesignsAnother Choice: Caplan's Rothko DesignsOkay, so I totally wimped out yesterday.  I think I was afraid to search for a “hip” kettubah because I feared that if I found one, and nobody else thought it was “hip,” I’d be branded as totally “unhip” forever.  But then a friend called me on my  bullshit, and so I spent a few hours last night hunting for the coolest Ketubah around. 

Guess what?  I actually found some things…. that don't look like synagogue windows.

These Ketubot by Jonathan Blum are really really different!  They’re essentially wooden frames, painted with YOUR likeness, and then the artist arranges for the parchment itself with a Sofer.  They have a kind of folk-art feel to them. I’ve never seen anything like ‘em!I Like: Blum's folk art framesI Like: Blum's folk art frames

Another idea, as you hunt for the perfect Ketubah, is to sample a Jewish cultural tradition beyond your own.  It’s nice that we have Jewish art from all kinds of countries, a built in multi-culturalism from our diaspora.  I like this Persian design by Simcha Back.

If you scroll to the bottom of the page, you’ll find a few examples of Stephanie Caplan’s Rothko  Ketubot.  She has some other interesting stuff too, but I think these are great!

 If you really have money to spend, think about getting something special.  For a pretty penny you can have one of these made for you by Elsa Wachs.  Hand-embroidered on vintage fabrics.  Wow!

 

These papercut Ketubot  (designs by Archie Granot) are amazing. And anyone who doesn’t think so should try cutting paper sometime.  I’m not certain the effect comes through fully online, but these are pretty complex works of art. 

And Then There's This:  For kissy JewsAnd Then There's This: For kissy JewsIn Nishima Kaplan’s gallery of designs, I found a lot of different kinds of things beyond the stained glass window style.  Here’s   one that looks like Klimts,“The Kiss”.  And Michelle Rummel uses similar Klimt-y inspiration.  I suppose where weddings are concerned, Klimt is to painting what Yehuda Amichai’s is to poetry.  But there’s a reason things get to be trendy…

These Ketubot are very plain, but they have a clean feel to them (you could never accuse them of looking like stained glass from the seventies), and the sofer(et) behind them sounds very very neat (she invented Tefillin Barbie!).

And last, but not least…

The Talmud Ketubah: Kicks it old skoolThe Talmud Ketubah: Kicks it old skoolThe Design Lab offers these Ketubot, by Gad Almaliah.  I don’t know if they’re hip, but they appeal to me.  Plainer and pretty traditional, some with embossed metal around the text.  This one looks like a page of Talmud, and it rocks.  I don’t know… I kind of feel like… if you’re going to hit some tradition, hit it hard.   

So, although I could have looked at these things all night, that’s the word on “hip” Ketubot (for now).  But if you ever are really hunting for something different, backchannel me, and I'll see what I can do to help you search.

One last note… in my quest for a cool Ketubah, I stumbled upon this site.  It’s a blog where some folks collaborated on a Ketubah.  And I wanted to add that I think this is awesome.   I don't love the design, but I do admire the idea. 

For what it’s worth, if I weren’t married yet, I think I might try making my own, or asking friends to collaborate on something…  Or maybe stealing Jonathan Blum's idea, and making a frame, and then putting a plain Ketubah in the frame.  Or asking an artist who doesn't usually make Ketubot to build a one-of-a-kind frame for me.

 

I think it’d be a neat thing to surprise my husband with.  He loves old maps, and music and as I’ve been writing this post, I keep imagining the Ketubah frame I could make out of  an old musty map and faded sheet music…



I scribble a lot. I talk too much. I apologize with wild abandon.


More...

Pamela Feldman-Hill


More ketubot

If you want to see even more ketubot, check out my website at www.pearleditions.com. I'm delighted to see you include Archie Granot's work in this article. I represent Archie in the US, as well as many other American and Israeli ketubah artists. Lots of varied work....papercuts and Persian designs, and some very cool pieces that are fun and whimsical calligraphically inspired designs. I've been creating ketubot for almost 30 years, and the changes in printing technology has really changed the field, and the web has changed the way ketubot are marketed. Lots of choices out there! 




DrMom


Judaica blog

I will be linking to this post tomorrow on my blog
www.judaicajournal.blogspot.com
And for what it is worth... I am in Atlanta too!
Talk about your Jewish geography!





JennaB


A "different" kind of a ketubah

Thank you for your posting Laurel,
Just like you, I was also looking for a "hip" ketubah (though I would call it "different"). I really did not want the usual ones that all the couples looking for a ketubah nowadays will know by heart.

I came across www.theketubahcompany.com noticing some of their ketubahs are in a Japanese calligraphy style, some are nature photos and some have other original Ideas. Now, that is what I call "different"!!!

I ended up getting the "kotobuki" ketubah which had a gorgeous real pressed flowers border