Right: Charlotte Edelheit combines

elegance and whimsy in her Rosh

Hashanah table. She uses an

antique epergne, filled with pink

roses, as a centerpiece. A bottle

cover in the shape of a man's suit

This page: Top left: Rachel Yoskowitz combines family tradi-

with a tallit adds some fun.

tions and heirlooms in her Passover table using her grand-

mother's antique silver flatware and a crocheted tablecloth by

her grandmother and aunt. Yoskowitz provided a family

vignette about the holiday and how each child has his own

seder plate.

Bottom middle: Family heirlooms grace the Chanukah table of

Susie Graham. The Rosenthal china, which belonged to her

great aunt Sylvia Kline, was sent to the United States from

Germany packed concealing diamonds.

Top right: Children will gravitate toward Amy Olender's

Chanukah table. She uses Chanukah crackers upon her Block

china.

Opposite page: Bottom left: Hannah Monique Ulrych uses

colorful masks and regal statues to

decorate the Purim table.

Top middle: A magnificent siddur stands erect on a table

designed by Hannah Monique Ulrych and her mother Toby

Dobkin.

Bottom right: Beverly Liss uses a silver seder plate by Frank

Meisler that holds matzah as a centerpiece on her Passover

table. The elegant details even included delicious gefilte fish.

STYLE AT THE JN • APRIL 2001

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