I design and sew custom tallitot (prayer shawls) and look forward to creating one for you. Write to me at info@customtallit.com about custom designs and about shipping to countries other than the US. Visit http://customtallit.com/ for more information.
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Tuesday, December 30, 2014
Burgundy and Gold
When we were designing this tallit, my customer really liked the lighter gold dupioni silk, but I thought it looked too pale against the bright white. Playing around with the colors, we came up with a solution: Put the light gold between the burgundy and a darker gold! Repeating stripes of these two golds together with a rich burgundy on fine white wool makes for a very luxurious tallit.
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Two Pinks and Silver
This a version of the pink and silver tallit that I have for sale now. A soon-to-be Bat Mitzvah saw it and wanted one with different shades of pink and the colors reversed so that the darker pink is on top. I think they both look good. This one is going to Canada.
Thursday, August 28, 2014
Purple!
This tallit is literally purple on purple. I had bought the semi-sheer polyester blend in Finland years ago, thinking that I might use some of it for stripes in a more conventional tallit, but now I decided to use it as the main piece. I added a piece of iridescent Indian cotton to each end for length. The color of the cotton goes perfectly with the main fabric and it's a little sturdier so I could make the holes for the tzitzit.
This tallit is the latest in my series of inexpensive tallitot that are still pretty and unique. I can keep the price low because the construction is very simple. The fabric speaks for itself, thus no need for stripes or other decoration.
P.S. This tallit sold exactly one week after I posted it. Am I onto something?
This tallit is the latest in my series of inexpensive tallitot that are still pretty and unique. I can keep the price low because the construction is very simple. The fabric speaks for itself, thus no need for stripes or other decoration.
P.S. This tallit sold exactly one week after I posted it. Am I onto something?
Saturday, August 16, 2014
Champagne and lavender
This tallit is a lot subtler than appears in the picture. My phone camera makes the lavender look darker and stronger than it actually is. The understated elegance of the champagne shantung silk with the two lavenders and the small amount of ivory white is unfortunately lost. For anyone interested in buying this tallit, I will be happy to send a swatch of the fabrics.
Tuesday, July 29, 2014
Rainbow tallit
I had thought for a while
about making a rainbow tallit, but didn't feel like buying a yard of
each color just to make two sets of inch-wide stripes. Now it turns out
that while working on other tallitot I had collected all the colors of
the rainbow, and so the project was finally on.
These colors are very brave and strong and look striking against the bright white background. The extra-wide atarah makes a strong statement, too.
I have now sold two of these, but I have more of the fabrics and could make another one.
These colors are very brave and strong and look striking against the bright white background. The extra-wide atarah makes a strong statement, too.
I have now sold two of these, but I have more of the fabrics and could make another one.
Monday, July 28, 2014
A new experiment
A new experiment for me: A customer wanted print rather than cursive lettering on the tallit. My hand embroidery stitches are better suited to the rounded shapes of the Hebrew script letters, and so I started looking for someone to do machine embroidery.
I sent strips of the yellow fabric to www.kippahdesign.com. She embroidered the strips and sent them back to me, and I finished the atarah and attached it to the tallit. This particular tallit has extra custom embroidery on it as well: The Shema at one hem, and the Bar Mitzvah boy's Hebrew name on the other.
I sent strips of the yellow fabric to www.kippahdesign.com. She embroidered the strips and sent them back to me, and I finished the atarah and attached it to the tallit. This particular tallit has extra custom embroidery on it as well: The Shema at one hem, and the Bar Mitzvah boy's Hebrew name on the other.
Thursday, July 10, 2014
Jewel colors
This was an unexpected combination: Purple, fuchsia, and turquoise on bright white. The Bat Mitzvah examined my fabrics at length and then pulled these colors out. She was absolutely certain that this was what she wanted. Her mother was not quite sure, but even she now agrees that it looks delicious!
Wednesday, July 9, 2014
Blue, turquoise, and silver
The Bat Mitzvah picked these colors from my fabric basket. The combination of deep turquoise, royal blue, and silver on bright white make for a very fresh look -- classic in a way, and modern, too. The blue, white, and silver are very traditional, but the turquoise adds an unexpected contemporary twist, as does the way the colors are combined into one wide stripe instead of being separate. This is what I love about custom work. I might not have chosen these colors, but now that I see them, I may use them again.
Thursday, July 3, 2014
Bar Mitzvah in Jerusalem
Wednesday, July 2, 2014
A change of pace
I have been working a lot with blues and greens lately, and now with the rainbow colors as well. I felt like doing something different, and so I looked into my fabric basket and pulled out something totally different: A raspberry dupioni silk, some iridescent purple dupioni that shifts from pink to forest green, and a piece of silver for a highlight. I had just enough of these favorite colors of mine to make once composite stripe. This combination looks very fresh and feminine on a base of cream dupioni silk.
As a finishing touch, I embroidered the Shema on the atarah in silver.
As a finishing touch, I embroidered the Shema on the atarah in silver.
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