Sunday, 10 May 2026

A Soldier’s Birthday

Since 7th October, I have been very careful not to share any personal information about the soldiers for whom I create cards. For their safety and security, I remove their names, and in any case, many of them have been explicitly told - not just advised - to avoid sharing anything on social media these days.
What I can share is that the mother of this young soldier asked me to create a birthday card for his 20th birthday. She wanted him depicted in his olive green Israeli army uniform, complete with his unit badge, his weapon, and his distinctive red army boots. She also asked me to include a heart with his girlfriend's name in it.
Just like the card I once made for Gadi, I depicted this young soldier in his uniform, holding his M4 rifle (Gadi's was an M16). His boots are placed next to him, along with the semel (symbol) of his unit and the requested heart. I did not include his beret on the card, but his mum asked me to use its colour for the number 20, marking his age.
"The birthday card was such a success!" she later wrote to me.
* This post has been shared on Happiness is Homemade

Sunday, 3 May 2026

Maya & Sam

Sam and Maya recently got married in Australia. My customer was travelling there to celebrate with them and asked me to create a special card to take along. She loved the idea of depicting the couple standing beneath the chuppah - the canopy used in Jewish wedding ceremonies - and was especially keen for me to include their dog on the card as well!
Because I made the card before the wedding, we had to take a guess at what the couple would be wearing. My customer thought the groom would choose a pale suit for the summer wedding, so we went with a beige one. For the bride, she imagined a sleeveless white dress and a veil.
I showed the couple crouching down in front of the chuppah, with their dog by their side. The chuppah is a canopy made of cloth or fabric, often beautifully decorated, and supported by four poles. It represents the couple's new home together - open on all sides to symbolize hospitality and the welcoming of family and friends. During the wedding ceremony, the couple stands beneath the chuppah, where many important rituals take place, including the exchange of rings and the recitation of blessings.
My customer was delighted with the card. "I can't wait to give it to them," she said. Later, she told me the couple absolutely loved it - it's even being framed! In fact, everyone who saw it loved it.

Sunday, 26 April 2026

Tel Hadid

On a gorgeous weekend in early February, we visited Tel Hadid, an archaeological site nestled in the Ben Shemen Forest in central Israel. Also known as al-Haditha in Arabic and as Adida or Aditha in ancient times, Tel Hadid rises 147 metres above sea level. From an observation deck, visitors can enjoy sweeping views of the Lod Valley to the south and west, while the Tel Aviv metropolitan area stretches across the horizon to the west and north. The area surrounding the tel (an ancient mound formed by centuries of human settlement) contains excavations of ancient agricultural installations and a large grove of ancient olive trees.
One of the cuneiform tablets found at Tel Hadid

Tel Hadid has been settled for over three thousand years. Archaeologists have found evidence of several main periods: the Iron Age (10th–6th centuries BCE), the Late Hellenistic period (2nd–1st centuries BCE), the Roman period including the time of the Mishnah (around the 1st–2nd centuries CE, when Jewish oral laws were first written down), and a modern Arab village that was abandoned in 1948. A fascinating part of Tel Hadid's history comes from an Iron Age II settlement, where two cuneiform tablets from the first half of the 7th century BCE were found. These legal documents mention people with non-local names, mainly Akkadian, alongside local names such as Ahab, showing that the site was home to a mixed community of locals and people brought here by the Neo-Assyrian Empire.
In Hasmonean times, Simeon the Hasmonean fortified the city in 143 BCE and fought the Seleucid general Tryphon nearby. During the time of the Mishnah, sages such as Rabbi Yakim of Hadid lived here. According to the Roman historian Josephus, Emperor Vespasian built a fortress at Hadid during his siege of Jerusalem.
Tel Hadid also appears on a section of the Madaba mosaic map, discovered in 1884 in a Byzantine church in Madaba, Jordan. This ancient map, created in the 6th century CE, shows the Holy Land with dozens of illustrated sites. The Greek letters in this section read: "Adithaim now Aditha." In 1955, excavations uncovered a Byzantine‑period mosaic (6th century CE) depicting a sailing ship, which is now displayed at the National Maritime Museum in Haifa.
Byzantine‑period mosaic from Tel Hadid
Today, Tel Hadid is largely covered with olive groves and cactus hedges planted by the former inhabitants of the Arab village of al-Haditha, alongside pine trees added later by the KKL-JNF (Jewish National Fund). The remains of ancient walls, cisterns, burial caves, tombs, and an olive press are scattered around the site as a testament to the long history of settlement on this hill. In 1949, a new farming settlement, Moshav Hadid, was established to the west of the site. The Israel National Trail, a long-distance hiking path that crosses the country from north to south, passes nearby.
The area around Tel Hadid is part of a KKL‑JNF forest and is open to the public. For flower lovers like me, February and March are the best months to see carpets of Iris Eretz‑Israel, a stunning flower in the iris family that blooms only in Israel and Syria, alongside the bright red anemones, known as kalaniot in Hebrew.
An interesting aside, Tel Hadid sits above Kvish Shesh, or Road 6, Israel's major north-south toll highway that runs from the Galilee in the north to the Negev in the south, passing beneath the tel through a tunnel. Road 6 follows the ancient "Via Maris" (Way of the Sea), which once linked Egypt with the northern empires of Mesopotamia. When the highway was built about twenty years ago, the tunnel was carved through the hill solely to preserve the archaeological remains of Tel Hadid, which happens to sit on top. Tens of thousands of people pass through the tunnel every day, completely unaware that an ancient city lies above their heads.

Sunday, 19 April 2026

Her New Kids!

A customer recently asked me to create a special card for her dear friend's 60th birthday. She sent me several photos of her friend, along with an adorable picture of her new dachshunds, Coco and Lulu.
"These are her new kids!" she told me.
She also asked me to include small Australian, Canadian, and Israeli flags on the card, as well as a prominent number 60 to mark this very special milestone birthday.
I carefully created a paper likeness of her friend, with the two long haired dachshunds in her arms. I added the Australian, Canadian, and Israeli flags as requested, along with a big number 60. To complete the design, I added a small red heart.
My customer was thrilled with the card. "Lisa, the card is perfect. Thank you so, so much. I love the way you have captured the dachshunds in Nicki's arms. They are like her 4th and 5th babies!"
She even sent me the wonderful video I have shared near the top of this post, showing her friend's reaction. "Nicki was so overcome she couldn't talk - only cry. She absolutely loved the card. Thank you so much."
Not long afterwards, the card was beautifully framed, and Nicki announced that it would soon have pride of place on her wall.

Sunday, 12 April 2026

A Grandma Who Loves Gardening, Reading, and Games

On Thursday morning, the last day of Passover, after 40 days of war, we woke to a ceasefire. The quiet felt unfamiliar. No planes overhead. No sirens. Not even the usual blaring alerts the moment I stepped into the shower. It was almost unsettling in its stillness.
And yet, I can't help but wonder - is this really what we hope for after everything we've been through? Homes lie shattered. Too many lives have been lost. And despite it all, the Iranian regime remains a global threat, continuing its pursuit of nuclear capability while tightening its grip on one of the world’s most vital waterways, the Strait of Hormuz.
We find ourselves standing in the wreckage, somehow expected to return to normal after more than a month of living on edge, in a reality that feels anything but ordinary.
Soon, Israel will shift from this fragile quiet into remembrance. The country will mark Yom Hazikaron, the day we remember Israel's fallen soldiers and victims of terrorism. Since losing Gadi, this day has become deeply personal for me, and I can no longer make the emotional transition to Yom Ha'atzmaut, Independence Day, which begins the following evening, the moment Memorial Day ends.
And still, despite everything, I return to my cards. With paper and glue and careful hands, I keep creating. It is my way of holding on and, in some small way, moving forward.

This card request followed soon after the extra-large 80th birthday card I designed for another special grandma, and the briefs for the two projects were strikingly similar. Both grandmas, it seems, enjoy gardening, so once again I started with a background of a garden and shrubs. This grandma, Vicki, was turning 85. She has 5 grandchildren and, as well as gardening and flowers, she enjoys reading and board games.  
My customer wanted her children's names incorporated into the flowers, which I arranged into girls and boys for visual balance. I also checked which board games grandma enjoys and learned it’s backgammon, cards, and Rummikub.
I chose to depict grandma sitting at a garden table, a Rummikub rack before her and a tile poised in her hand. Next to her sits a small pile of books, waiting to be read. In the background, I added the requested flowers, along with a plant pot and trowel. Finally, a large 85 marks her age.
Her daughter, my customer, was delighted with the card!