The Ke­tubah is a col­lec­tion of art cre­at­ed by artist Stephanie Ca­plan. She start­ed mak­ing ke­tubot af­ter she made one for a friend as a wed­ding gift. From there Stephanie’s pas­sion for ke­tubot took off — it com­bined her love for art and Jew­ish cul­ture. Stephanie’s fo­cus is to cre­ate ke­tubot for every­one to en­joy, wether their fo­cus is more about the tra­di­tion­al­ism of the text, the style of the art or both!

Noah and I both agreed that her web­site felt like vis­it­ing an art gallery, sim­ple and clean. What we en­joyed even more was that she was able to keep this aes­thet­ic while al­so in­clud­ing a ton of in­for­ma­tion about her ke­tubot. She in­cludes in­for­ma­tion and nec­es­sary steps from the very be­gin­ning to the end — from or­der­ing and de­sign­ing to fi­nal ship­ment and dis­play. The Ke­tubah web­site al­though straight­for­ward and easy to nav­i­gate, does­n’t have the best set up to pur­chase her ketubot.

Her de­sign op­tions are fair­ly sim­ple and stan­dard for most ke­tubah artists. She in­cludes a va­ri­ety of texts that fit all styles of cou­ples and in­di­vid­ual tastes. Most of her ke­tubot have clas­sic, nat­ur­al themes and im­ages. We loved the dif­fer­ent ke­tubot gal­leries she has with var­i­ous ma­te­ri­als, styles and or­na­ments. She al­so in­cludes the op­tion to add 23 ct. gold leaf ac­cents for an ex­tra charge — it’s these lit­tle touch­es that tru­ly make Stephanie’s web­site and ke­tubot unique! Un­for­tu­nate­ly her art pieces are more on the prici­er side, but the ma­jor­i­ty are orig­i­nal wa­ter­col­or paint­ings and def­i­nite­ly worth tak­ing a look!