Custom Siddurim

(mouse-over the pages to pause the slideshow)
We have produced adult Siddurim for Temple Har Zion (Toronto). Holy Blossom Temple (Toronto) and Temple Israel (Ottawa) and two children Siddurim for The Leo Baeck Day School. The Senior edition (Grades 5–8) contains the texts for a weekday Shacharit service and a Friday afternoon Kabbalat Shabbat service. The Junior edition contains a core service for Grades 1 and 2, and a second set of services for Grades 3 and 4.
The Junior Siddur
As creative designer, I wanted this children's siddur to be more than a collection of words and pictures. I wanted the design to provoke thought and stimulate discussion. My goal was to devise a prayerbook for younger students that would be engaging and educational without relying on textual commentary. Images and layout, instead of explanations, would have to illustrate the structure of the prayerbook and the significant themes of the prayers. Yet many ideas found in the Siddur are difficult to illustrate; how does one draw a picture of ‘God is One’? For each prayer, we asked: how can we design this page to communicate the main idea of this text?
Below, the shacharit Amidah is open to the second blessing of the Amidah: the Gevurot, God's power. The calendar image represents the 6 months we insert the prayer for rain and the 6 months we pray for dew (in Israel). This prayer, praising God as the source of life, connects the ideas of death and rebirth with the cycle of the seasons and the natural sources of fresh water (in Israel): rain and dew.
Across the top of this two page spread, icons represent the 18 benedictions of the Amidah (and the highlighted icon the worshipper's place). The Amidah's overall structure is indicated by the icon's colour: the first three blessings of praise, the middle 12 blessings of requests, (further divided into two: blessings for the individual, and for community), and the final three blessings of thanks.
The Aleinu is a prayer that speaks of God's unity: "On that day, God's name will be One" yet remarkably, the Aleinu uses seven different names for God: HaKadosh Baruch Hu, Shadai, Eloheinu, etc. The two page spread below for the Aleinu is a visual midrash that tries to answer the question, why would the Aleinu prayer use so many names for God, when ultimately, the prayer is suggesting that God's name is only one?
This puzzle reminded us of learning how the spectrum's seven colours can be seen with a prism. The prism that refracts a single beam of white light illustrates how the seven names/colours are really one. Here we wrote each of the seven names in a different colour of the rainbow (three of the names that appear in the final paragraph—not present in the abbreviated text included here—float on the page) with the four letter Tetragrammaton (Adonai) in white.
This puzzle reminded us of learning how the spectrum's seven colours can be seen with a prism. The prism that refracts a single beam of white light illustrates how the seven names/colours are really one. Here we wrote each of the seven names in a different colour of the rainbow (three of the names that appear in the final paragraph—not present in the abbreviated text included here—float on the page) with the four letter Tetragrammaton (Adonai) in white.

