At Remodelista we’re ever on the lookout for menorahs of distinction. What we’re hoping to find are designs that do the trick at Hanukkah, and that we’d want to put to use as candleholders throughout the year. Here are some of this year’s standouts.
Brooklyn ceramic artist Virginia Sin describes her Stacke Menorah as “sleek and brutalist”; $110.
From Judaica Standard Time, a startup that “explores the space between faith and design”: the JST X Ank Ceramics Menorah is one of a kind in a glaze called Sparrow; $300.
The Citizenry’s made-in-Guatemala Tikal Wood Menorah, $250, is a freestanding ensemble.
From her Camden, Maine, studio, Ariela Nomi Kuh of ANK Ceramics makes a line of menorahs in editions of one, no two alike. They’re priced from $200 to $300.
Via Maris’s steel Trace Chanukiah, $155, comes in Midnight and four other colors.