Ester Shahaf is a graduate of Tel Aviv University and an accomplished designer of Judaica. Drawing
her inspiration from her surroundings, Ester resides and creates in the picturesque town of
Binyamina, a town which integrates all the different cultures of our country. Merging the old world
Orient & Mediterranean with modern designs Ester creates by means of color and style, bringing to
life all the exotic heritage that makes this land and people so enchanting. In her work, Ester blends
diverse materials to even the contrasts. The soft and warm wood blends with the clean, smooth
metal, and the shiny crystals rest on satin vivid colors. Each piece is individually hand crafted, using
pewter, silver, brass and Swarovski crystals.
Ester Shahaf;s Judaica creations are displayed in museum shops and First-Class  art-shops in
Israel and the United States.
A native-born Israeli, Michal David creates decorative art with a distinctive nostalgic style.  Her studio,
Michal David Designs, produces art objects for the home environment and more.  Using Victorian,
Romantic, and Classic themes, she brings timeless images of roses, angels, and portraits to a wide
variety of decorative pieces.  Surface treatments may include gold pigment, glass crystals, painting,
and antiquing, all within her signature style
Treasure Jewelry
Box by Michal David
Key Mazuzah case
by Michal David
Wall Mounted Picture
by Michal David
Roses Hamsa by
Michal David
Hamsa Hand
Adina Plastelina specializes in the design and crafting of unique jewelry by means of the Millefiori
process.
Millefiori is the combination of the Italian words Mille (Thousand) and Fiori (Flowers), a term used for
the first time around the 1850, yet the process itself has been in use for about 2,000 years. During the
14th century it was rediscovered by Venetian glass makers, who produced "Canes" of glass with
patterns running through the entire length from which identical slices were cut and used in various
ways. These Canes and their images can be "reduced" becoming quite small and then combined to
make multiple images (Millefiori). It's popularity escalated around 1850 and it has been on the rise
ever since.
Now, two thousand years later, the talented craftsman of Adina Plastelina, have revived this technique
and applied it to Polymer Clay, a material superior to glass for producing Millefiori patterns. The play of
colors, shapes and patterns, joined together with materials such as Silver, Stainless Steel and
Pewter, transform these pieces into handmade, individual works of art, no two of which are identical.