CELEBRATE! TOPPING IT OFF from page 13 You Don't Have To Go Downtown to *rxet the "Tops on my list... their Filet Mignon" I . "The best Pizza in Metro Detroit" John Tanasychuk, Detroit Free Press, January 8th, 1999 • Pasta Specialties • Pizza • Steaks* Chops • Poultry • Seafood • Cocktails OPEN DAILY - LUNCH & DINNER OPEN WEEKDAYS UNTIL 2:00 AM WEEKENDS UNTIL 3:30 AM A Ferndale Favorite Since 1961 OO 9S Italian-American Family Restaurant Woodward at 9 Mile • (248) 548-5005 Bar/Bat Mitzvahs • Theme Parties Birthdays • Anniversaries • Corporate Events Sweet Tables • Sculpted Cakes ,13 Custom Wedding Cakes '" Parmentier 40001 Grand River, Novi, MI 48375 (248) 473-4511 www.jpdesserts.com Up to 10% Savings on Select Packages . 3/15 Weddings • Bar/Bat Mitzvah 2002 NEW CONTRACTS ONLY ;14 Phone: 248-960-6121 1 "Scott and I have the needlepoint hanging on our wall by the front door," says Nicky. "Every time I walk in the door, I am reminded of that day and the fact that the chuppah was our first home." For Scott Glickman, being able to use the Cranis' chuppah was especially meaningful: "It was made by someone I know for people I know and love. Jody's sister, Teresa, and Brian, her husband, are my best friends in the whole world. Being married under the chuppah Teresa's mother made, made our wedding that much more special." Facing A Deadline and the colors of the individual letters — rose, orchid, aqua, persimmon — both complement and blend with one another. Outlined in gold and then silver, each letter is worked in a different stitch — checkerboards, chevrons, stripes — and is also accented with a special embellishment, such"as beads, metallic threads or crystals. Schwartz, who also worked with Rachel Einstandig, says Rachel "is an absolute genius. She sees things that no one else does. She can visualize a design and make the colors and pat- terns flow." While some chupppahs are new, old chuppahs bring their own special meaning. Ann Arbor residents Lisa and Ira Winer were married beneath Sharon Schwartz has given herself nearly two years to complete the chup- pah for her son and daughter-in-law- to-be, but she still frets it won't be ready for the wed- ding in July 2003. Though not a newcomer to needlepoint, Mrs. Schwartz, of Bloomfield Hills, had second thoughts as she began this labor of love. Once she started the first panel, however, she was eager to keep going. "I got so into it," she remembers, "and so excited thinking that this would be a family heirloom ... I couldn't love Shauna [Trompeter, the future bride] any more than if I'd given birth to her myself. I thought of my child mar- rying someone so good for Scott and Jody Cranis' chuppah has been used him ... I just couldn't put at many events. [the needlepoint] down." Mrs. Schwartz finished the first 6-foot by 18-inch an embroidered tablecloth that had panel, inscribed with the words ani been part of Lisa's great-grandmother's I'dodi v'dodi li, in a fast three months. dowry from Hungary. It was brought She has finished a second panel — a to the states by Lisa's grandmother, parade of women carrying symbols of Erna Weiss, after World War II. Jewish celebration — and is working "My grandmother is the most won- on the third, a companion scene of derful, giving person," Lisa says. "She men. has been to every major event in my The fourth panel is yet to be life — graduations, my swearing-in designed, but will feature images of ceremony when I passed the bar. Jerusalem and a bridal couple. "When my sister suggested using the Worked in sherbet colors, the let- tablecloth as our chuppah, I thought it tered panel hints at how magnificent would be a wonderful way to honor the completed chuppah will be. her. So many relatives were killed in Schwartz used numerous shades of the Holocaust and it became quite sig- purple in the Hebrew letters because nificant to have family ancestry repre- that is Shauna's favorite color. Each sented. It also symbolized the home I letter is worked in a different stitch