PANDORA is just the beginning f elebrate ........... 3 endless gift ideas at guide t sini:chahs GMGRY'S Creative Jewelers, Inc. Family owned & operated since 1947 Tess Relle is almost squeezed out of the car by the trunk load of potted pansies that decorated Shabbat dinner tables, adorned the bimah at the ceremony and finally became part of the Katzman-Relle garden. C ome mane your Iva Li today. Continued from page B20 248-855-0433 • 30975 Orchard Lake Rd. • Farmington Hills 1355690 Transfcrrrning Memories into the Gift of a Lifetime We will take your party on a fun and exciting Sentimental Journey with a beautiful video montage. Imagine a personalized video montage with your pictures and videos! Next, imagine taking those pictures and videos and adding creative special effects, music and titles — just like they do in Hollywood! — talk about exciting! You'll want to watch your video over and over again!! We're a company that specializes in custom producing video montages and that's all we do! You have great memories — don't settle for something less than they deserve. Phone: 248-726-0624 I www.sentiment roductions.com B 2 2 celebrate! I March 2008 house plant them with pansies. They served as centerpieces for the Shabbat dinner at Knollwood Country Club in West Bloomfield the night before the ceremony. After the dinner, "I took the pansies and set them outside Beth Ahm and took them into the shul the next morning. I did the whole bimah in pansies. As soon as I brought them home I planted them in my garden." For both the Shabbat dinner and kids' party, Katzman planned simple food with no excess. "I wanted Friday night to be like a Shabbat dinner in my house. We did it family style times 110 people." Invitees were close enough to have had a photograph taken with at least one Katzman-Relle family member some time in the past. I went to the Dollar store and got all kinds of 4x6-inch frames. Not only was the photo their place card, but their take-away," Katzman said. For the kids' party, there were no centerpieces on the kids' tables and "the food was incredibly calculated," she said. "I had to tell Knollwood, 'You can leave it out until it's gone. It doesn't have to look good." "We didn't serve large portions," confirmed Jessica Waxman, Knollwood club house manager. "She wanted us to leave the food out longer than we normally do, because the kids might want to nibble later. She really wanted there not to be any waste. It was not a matter of cost." Instead of hard-to-dispose-of signs, the family used metal gobos that projected Daniel and Tess' names and the party theme onto screens. Overhead lights were dim. "I tried to make the lighting as energy efficient as I could," Katzman said. Relle acknowledged his wife's green spirit as part of his formal remarks to family and friends. "Who else would have thought of having growing flowers as centerpiec- es for tonight, symbolizing spring and life?" Relle asked. "And who else would have thought of plantable invitations?" Katzman recently received a call from Liz Elkus as the Bloomfield Hills woman considers a theme of tikkun olam (repairing the world) for her daughters 2009 bat mitzvah party. "I'm carrying cloth bags to the grocery store because my daughter asked me to," Elkus said. So an environmentally conscious celebration Is not too far from who she is." The Elkus family already has some experience with a green celebration theme. "For our son's bar mitzvah, we planted a garden in Israel and everyone left with a plant." Using sustainable materials "is very timely, with all the recycling and global warming issues that are happening," Elkus said. "It is really just a beautiful idea, instead of adding to all the waste in the world."