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What is ushpizin wall art?
Ushpizin wall art presents the seven guests of the sukkah — their names and the welcome extended to them — as a designed piece for the sukkah wall or table, rather than a plain printed list. It anchors the sukkah's decor in the holiday's most personal custom.
What text appears on ushpizin art?
The pieces carry the names of the seven ushpizin — Avraham through Dovid — and, on most designs, the traditional invitation recited each night. That makes the art functional: it's read from, not just looked at.
Should ushpizin art hang on the wall or stand on the table?
Both have their place: standing tabletop ushpizin plaques — classic, navy, Painted by Batya, and Classic 2.0 basic — sit where the invitation is read, while card and wall versions keep the guests visible to the whole sukkah. The formats mix well in one sukkah.
Will ushpizin art survive a week outdoors?
Yes — acrylic plaques and cards are built for sukkah conditions, wiping clean of dew and handling the nightly temperature drop that ruins framed paper art. They're outdoor pieces that happen to look like indoor ones.
How do I choose between the painted and classic styles?
Painted by Batya and painted navy versions bring color and an artistic hand to the sukkah, while the classic and Classic 2.0 basic designs keep to clean lines that suit a minimal tablescape. Match whichever direction your other decorations lean.
What pairs well with ushpizin wall art?
The painted ushpizin card for the table, the Leather Sukkos Booklet for the full texts, and Waterdale's vinyl decoration sets for the surrounding walls. Built around the ushpizin, the whole sukkah gains a single coherent theme.
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