To read lots of customer comments click here
"The kit...was so much more than I expected. You offer elegant engineering solutions, a simple and beautiful sukkah and a process that is easy to understand and complete. With thanks from a very satisfied customer who is now passing your URL around her shul."
J.B.
"Thanks once again for such a beautiful service to our community and such a wonderful product. I've built several of your wood and steel frame Sukkot in the past, and know how easy they are to assemble. With the right team in place, we set up a 24x36 sukkah with roof in under two hours. I especially love the new bamboo roofing poles!"
Rabbi D.T.
"Steve and Judith, On behalf of everyone at Temple Israel in Westport, we want to thank you for helping to make our event, 60Sukkot, a wonderful success. We had a beautiful day and a huge turnout. Everyone was pleased with your products."
E.D.
"This morning we took the 16x24 WoodFrame Sukkah down... Everyone was amazed at how easy your kit and plans made things go. But more importantly, our congregants (and Rabbi) love it. It is roomy, and the wood and bamboo mat roof gave it a warm feeling that our old PVC pipe Sukkah sorely lacked".
D.W.
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NEW for 2011! Lulav & Etrog Banner
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sorry--sold out of this item
Item Number: SB-WEL
"Lulav & Etrog" by Sharon Binder depicts the "Four Species": ..."the fruit of goodly trees, branches of palm trees, boughs of leafy trees and willows of the brook..."Leviticus 23:40.
A midrash applied to this verse views the lulav (palm frond) as symbolic of the human spine, the hadas (myrtle branch) symbolic of the eye, the arava (willow branch) symbolic of the lips, and the etrog (citron) symbolic of the heart. According to the midrash, when
all four species are taken together in the festival "bouquet" they
represent the essential parts of the human body uniting to praise
the Creator.

Digitally printed on weather-proof nylon fabric suitable for outdoor exposure. Banner is 20 inches wide and 40 inches high, with dowel pockets top & bottom for hanging (dowels included).
Available exclusively from the Sukkah Project.
American-born judaic artist Sharon Binder lives in
Jerusalem, where she paints with watercolor, gouache and acrylics, and applies her
images to wall hangings, glass, metal and fabric. Binder has recently designed
a series of large fabric panels depicting the Seven Species, Arba Minim and
other Sukkot-related themes, two of which have been produced as weatherproof
Banners by the Sukkah Project: "Etrog & Lulav" and "Bruchim Habaim" (Welcome).
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Yes, that was us you read about in…
New York Times (10/2/2008)
Raleigh News & Observer (10/11/2008)
Wondertime Magazine (Oct. 2008)
Wall Street Journal
Washington Post
Newark Star Ledger
Bergen Record
Jewish Woman
Jewish Week
Baltimore Jewish Times
American Jewish Spirit
Peoria Journal Star
Philly.com
Jewish Bulletin of N. Calif.
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