Samples
This page has short summaries and a few examples for each category.
There are links in each section to more examples.
Bar/Bat Mitzvah siddur covers
Wedding bencher covers
Conservative pages
Orthodox pages
Reform pages
Family Haggadah pages
Unique ideas
The style of your cover design depends on the type of book. Perfectbound books have full-color, full-bleed (color all the way to the edge) glossy covers. Saddle-stitched books have lots of different options: colored or special papers, foil stamping, or blind embossing. [Lots more examples] [Siddur prices]
We have made so many different cover designs that we have to classify them in groups:
| CustomSiddur classic designs | Your event site |
| Your invitation | Ritual objects |
| Professional Jewish art | Your own artwork |
| Natural beauty | Special interests |
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Wedding Bencher Covers
A high-resolution photograph can make a beautiful cover: lace from the bride's dress, the groom's tallis, your chuppah, your ketubah, or anything that has special meaning for you. [more samples] [Bencher prices]
The translations for our Conservative siddurim are from your choice of Siddur Sim Shalom volumes. All that is needed is a few minutes of your rabbi's time to get permission from The Rabbinical Assembly. We make it very easy!
[more samples]
The translations for our Orthodox siddurim are from the traditional Hertz Authorized Version (Bloch Publishing Co). The Hebrew can be adapted to follow traditional Ashkenazic or Sefardic nusach. [more samples]
Reform Pages
Our Reform English translations come from all the CCAR siddurim, including the Gates of Prayer series and the new Mishkan Tfilah. But the layouts are our own, so every page can have exactly what you want - just the right transliterations to help your guests follow the service, exactly the prayers and readings you and your rabbi want. [more samples]
Unique Ideas
When you offer a "custom" book, every family has a different idea of how to customize it.Lots of our customers have brought us terrific ideas, and we are happy to share them with you. [more samples]
For a short Torah reading, a family used a two-page spread to show the Hebrew and English inside a drawing of a scroll:
For a Purim Megillah, the Bat Mitzvah girl made a lovely line drawing to wind around the pages:
A family artist designed fun icons to mark the sections of a wedding bencher:![]()






