Luxury Shabbat Gifts

Luxury Shabbat gifts

Pieces for the Friday table that the recipient sees every week. Silver kiddush cups, hand-embroidered challah covers, hand-painted crystal decanters, silver napkin rings, and full multi-piece Shabbat sets in a wooden gift box.

Six things to know in 30 seconds. One. The Friday table sees the gift fifty times a year, more than any other Jewish ritual moment. Two. Kiddush cup is the strongest single piece. Three. Add a challah cover for a paired gift. Four. Decanter set fits the home bar. Five. Engraving and embroidery add three to six weeks. Six. Multi-piece custom Shabbat sets run eight to twelve weeks.

Why a Shabbat gift outweighs a holiday gift

A Hanukkah piece comes out for eight days a year. A seder plate for one week. A shofar for two days. A Shabbat piece is on the table fifty times a year and on the bar between uses. The recipient sees the gift, with the engraved date or name, three hundred days a year for the rest of their life.

Where the gift goes

The kiddush moment

Silver becher with the saucer. The wine pours from the decanter into the becher, the becher overflows into the saucer, and the room says amen. The cup is the visible piece of the kiddush, and the recipient holds it every week.

The bread course

The challah cover comes off, the bracha is said over the two loaves, and the cover folds back onto the basket. The cover with the synagogue-art embroidery or the King David Swarovski cover is the centerpiece of the bread course.

The L’chaim

Decanter and shot glasses for the L’chaim around the table. The set sits on the bar between Shabbatot. Wedding date or company logo on the underside means the gift never leaves the giver’s name behind.

The place setting

Silver napkin rings on each plate is the smallest detail of the table and the one guests notice. Sets of six or twelve, engravable on the inside of each ring with a guest’s initial.

What to give for what occasion

Occasion Recommended Price
Wedding, first home Silver becher + linen challah cover $1,550
Anniversary Synagogue-art challah cover $2,300
Housewarming Decanter and 4 shot glasses $1,950
Bar mitzvah for boy hosting first Shabbat Silver becher $950
Synagogue donor Brodsky silver-gilt becher engraved $1,050
Family-style large host Decanter + 10 shot glasses $2,300

Featured pieces

Common questions

What is the strongest single Shabbat gift?

A silver kiddush cup with the recipient’s wedding date or Hebrew name engraved on the foot. The cup is on the table every Friday for life. The Brodsky silver-gilt edition or the Hebrew alphabet edition at $950 to $1,050 is the standard pick.

Why give a Shabbat gift instead of a generic Judaica gift?

A Shabbat gift is used every week. Hanukkah pieces come out for eight days a year, Passover for one week, but Shabbat happens every Friday. The gift sits on the table or on the bar between uses. The recipient sees it three hundred days a year.

What does a complete Shabbat gift set include?

A kiddush cup, a challah cover, two challot at the actual dinner, and candleholders. A complete gift from this line builds the cup and the cover, paired in one wooden gift box. Candleholders are added on request. Decanter sets are an add-on for the bar.

Is a challah cover or a kiddush cup the better gift?

For a first wedding gift, the kiddush cup. For an anniversary or a milestone, the embroidered challah cover from the synagogue-art series, because the recipient already has cups. For someone setting up a first home, both, in a paired gift box.

What is the price range for Shabbat gifts in this line?

Linen embroidered challah cover from $600. Silver becher with Hebrew alphabet from $950. Hand-painted decanter from $750. Set of decanter and four shot glasses $1,950. Set of decanter and ten shot glasses $2,300. Multi-piece custom Shabbat set $2,500 to $5,000.

Can the gift include a personal dedication?

Yes. Engraving on the silver, embroidery on the challah cover, printed dedication on the wooden box. The wedding date, the couple’s names, the Hebrew dates, and the family monogram are common requests. Add three to six weeks for personalization.

Is this line kosher and observant-appropriate?

Yes. Every piece is designed for use in observant homes. Materials are silver, crystal, linen, wool, and leather. The studio works with rabbis on the synagogue-art and Hebrew alphabet pieces. Tefillin scrolls and mezuzah scrolls are kosher-certified by the writing scribe, sold separately.

How long does a Shabbat gift take to ship?

In-stock pieces ship in two to four working days, two-week delivery worldwide with full insurance. Engraved or embroidered pieces add three to six weeks for personalization. Multi-piece custom Shabbat sets ship in eight to twelve weeks. Express shipping available on request.

For a wedding, an anniversary, or a synagogue dedication, send the date and the dedication. Quote and a digital proof of the engraving in two business days. Start the brief.

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