Jstyle Fall 2016

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The Cleveland Jewish News Fall 2016

Fashion. Food. Décor.

JSTYLE | Fall 

Destination:

DOWNTOWN Cleveland’s core underwent a makeover this year, presenting new sights – and sites – to experience


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CONTENTS Fall 2016

16

DESTINATION: DOWNTOWN

Cleveland’s core underwent a makeover this year, including new buildings, businesses and spaces that present new sights – and sites – to experience

 Editor’s Note

 Ask Elana

 Small wonders

Michael C. Butz writes of a new Cleveland experience

Establish high standards

Environmentally conscious Tiny Houses may be the next big thing in housing, and two have sprouted in Cleveland’s Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood

 Chai Life 18 interesting things to do in Greater Cleveland

 Destination: Downtown Cleveland’s core underwent a makeover this year, presenting new sights – and sites – to experience

 Beauty

 Get the Look

 Nosh News

Space savers

The latest on Jewish chefs and restaurateurs

 Room Service

 Good to the last designer drop

 Refresh & Renew

Second life living rooms

A special advertising section for cosmetic and plastic surgery

Ohio City shopping

 Sweet new year

Fall looks from local retailers

 Dapper Man

Dress up apples and honey this Rosh Hashanah with help from Bistro 185’s Ruth Levine

 Pursuits

 Staff Pick

Cool coats

Jstyle

Third-generation Holocaust survivors in Northeast Ohio step up to keep remembrance top of mind

At Pour Cleveland, Charlie Eisenstat is brewing something special in Cleveland’s coffee landscape – and elevating the scene in the process

Purely pomegranate

6

 G coverage

Fall 2016

 Fashion Focus

Finding yourself

jstylemagazine.com


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OPENERS

FROM THE EDITOR

Cleveland: a‘real’ city

he final stop for our fall fashion photo shoot in this issue of Jstyle was Bar 32, the aptly named bar on the 32nd floor of the Hilton Cleveland Downtown. There is a handful of rooftop bars in downtown Cleveland, and while Bar 32 may offer only a quasi-rooftop experience, it’s certainly one of the highest such social gathering places in the city. (One can’t buy a drink at the Terminal Tower’s 42nd floor observation deck.) It’s a unique experience – one that will feel familiar to anyone who’s visited New York or Chicago. To be clear, though, Cleveland has always been a “real city.” Like any big city, it has its ups (flourishing neighborhoods, a vibrant arts scene and a renowned park system) and downs (crime, illiteracy rates and income inequality). But for the first time in what seems like a long time, others are noticing Cleveland more for what it’s doing right than what it’s getting wrong. We frequently showcase “what’s right” in Jstyle, and this issue is no different.

It was a beautiful day. Cool temperatures and few clouds made for ideal photo shoot conditions, and from 32 floors up, that sunny September sky afforded me, the models and the Jstyle creative team a spectacular view of Northeast Ohio. While we were up there, one of the models remarked, “Cleveland looks like a real city from up here.” And he was right. Of course, his point wasn’t that Cleveland isn’t or hasn’t been a real city. In a literal sense, his commentary was on the view. Rather than seeing only three or four tall buildings from a distance, a more metropolitan landscape could be seen from up close. Being surrounded by the many smaller but still substantial buildings provides a more three-dimensional view of downtown than one gets from farther away. And beyond what one can see from that altitude, there’s how it feels.

On the cover Cover photo by Casey Rearick of Casey Rearick Photo

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Fall 2016

Fashion. Food. Décor.

JSTYLE | Fall 

Amanda Shvets shops at a farmer’s market on Public Square in downtown Cleveland. Wardrobe details are on Page 26.

The Cleveland Jewish News

Destination:

DOWNTOWN Cleveland’s core underwent a makeover this year, presenting new sights – and sites – to experience

In addition to visiting Hilton Cleveland Downtown and Bar 32, we spent time in the revamped Public Square for the fall fashion shoot. That time included a stop at REBoL, a tasty (and healthy) new addition to the region’s thriving dining scene. We also invite readers to take a peak inside one of the new Tiny Houses in the DetroitShoreway neighborhood, and we check in with the owner of Pour Cleveland and co-owner of Bistro 185 for this issue’s food features. In various ways, the fashion, food and décor sections of Jstyle highlight the people and places that help make Cleveland a “real city,” and as always, I encourage you to experience those things to the fullest.

Editor Michael C. Butz editor@jstylemagazine.com Art Director Jon Larson

Cleveland Jewish Publication Company President & CEO Kevin S. Adelstein Vice President of Sales Adam Mandell CJN Managing Editor Bob Jacob Controller Tracy DiDomenico Manager of Digital Marketing Rebecca Fellenbaum Events Manager Gina Lloyd Editorial Kristen Mott Ed Wittenberg Carlo Wolff Digital Content Producer Lillian Messner Custom Publishing Manager Paul Bram Advertising Marcia Bakst Marilyn Evans Ron Greenbaum Andy Isaacs Adam Jacob Nell V. Kirman Sherry Tilson Design Jessica Simon Stephen Valentine Business & Circulation Diane Adams Tammie Crawford Abby Royer Subscriber Services --/circulation@cjn.org Display Advertising -- advertising@jstylemagazine.com VOL.  NO.  CLEVELAND JEWISH NEWS (ISSN-) is published weekly with additional issues in January, March, May, June, August, October, November and December by The Cleveland Jewish Publication Company at  Commerce Park, Suite , Cleveland, OH -. Single copy .. Periodicals Postage paid at Cleveland, OH., and additional mailing offices. POSTMASTER and additional mailing offices. Send address changes to the Cleveland Jewish News,  Commerce Park, Suite , Cleveland, OH -

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The Chai Life 18 interesting things to do this

fall in Greater Cleveland Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage The Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage’s latest exhibition, “This Light of Ours: Activist Photographers of the Civil Rights Movement” opens Sept. 29. Comprised of black-and-white documentary photographs from Southern Freedom Movement photographers, the show revisits the struggle against race-based disenfranchisement. maltzmuseum.org

High Holy Days L’Shana Tovah and Tzom Kal. Jstyle wishes you a happy and healthy new year and hopes for an easy fast for everyone. Visit Jstyle’s sister publication, the Cleveland Jewish News, for extensive coverage of what’s happening locally for Rosh Hashanah (Oct. 2-4) and Yom Kippur (Oct. 11-12). cjn.org/holidays

Playhouse Square

Arthur Lelyveld, former spiritual leader of Anshe Chesed Fairmount Temple in Beachwood, receives first aid after being beaten with a tire iron by segregationists while helping blacks register to vote in Hattiesburg, Miss. ©1964 Herbert Randall, Courtesy Center for Documentary Expression and Art

Playhouse Square Broadway Series kicks off Oct. 2 with “Fun Home,” which runs through Oct. 22. The series continues with “Finding Neverland” (Nov. 1-20); “Into the Woods” (Jan. 10-29, 2017); “The King and I” (Feb. 7-26, 2017); “The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time” (March 21 – April 9, 2017); “Something Rotten!” (April 25 – May 14, 2017); and “An American in Paris” (June 20 – July 9, 2017). broadway.playhousesquare.org

Chagrin Documentary Film Festival This year’s Chagrin Documentary Festival takes place Oct. 5-9 and features 75 films, including “Breakfast at Ina’s,” a film about beloved Chicago restaurateur Ina Pinkey sponsored by the Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage; “The Last Laugh,” which asks the likes of Mel Brooks, Sarah Silverman, Gilbert Gottfried and Rob Reiner whether humor and the Holocaust can coexist; and “Presenting Princess Shaw,” a film about a New Orleans care worker and Israeli composer who come together to create music, sponsored by the Jewish Federation of Cleveland. chagrinfilmfest.org

Tangerine Entertainment Comedian and filmmaker Mel Brooks in a scene from “The Last Laugh.”

Cleveland Cavaliers The reigning NBA champion Cleveland Cavaliers (has a nice ring to it, doesn’t it?) begin their title defense during the season- and home-opener against the new-look New York Knicks on Oct. 25 at Quicken Loans Arena. cavs.com

Cleveland Indians

Cleveland Jewish News The start of the Cavs’ 2015-16 NBA championship parade on June 22 through downtown Cleveland.

If the Indians hold on to their American League Central Division lead, the team’s first playoff game will be on Oct. 6. Will 2016 hold yet another championship for Northeast Ohio? Cheer on the Tribe to find out! indians.com

We’re social! For the latest updates, follow Jstyle at @jstylemagazine.

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Contemporary & Modern Furniture

Contemporary & Modern Furniture

Designers Furniture www.designersfurniturecleveland.com 1603 Golden Gate Plaza Mayfield Hts. (440) 483-1000

jstylemagazine.com

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Fall 2016

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OPENERS

the chai life Amy Schumer Anyone who missed Amy Schumer perform in Kent earlier this year is in luck. The actress and comedian returns to Northeast Ohio for an Oct. 6 performance at Quicken Loans Arena. theqarena.com

Little Italy Art Walk The annual fall Little Italy Art Walk takes over Murray Hill and Mayfield Road the weekend of Oct. 7-9, as well as Oct. 10 during the annual Columbus Day parade. Go for the galleries, stay for dinner. clevelandlittleitaly.com

NCJW/Cleveland From left: Jill Braun, of Solon, wears the jacket of a red tweed suit; Braun also wears part of a two-piece black suit; Michele Kaminsky, of Beachwood, wears a wrap top and dark pants

Cleveland Beer Week Cleveland Beer Week returns to Northeast Ohio for 350 events the week of Oct. 14-22, during which participants can taste new brews, learn more about craft beer, and support local bars and restaurants. clevelandbeerweek.org

Designer Dress Days Bargain-seeking fashionistas can update their wardrobe (with looks like those pictured above) during National Council of Jewish Women/Cleveland’s annual Designer Dress Days on Oct. 28, Oct. 30, Oct. 31 and Nov. 1 at the Mandel JCC in Beachwood. New or gently worn designer clothing, jewelry, handbags and accessories will be available, and DDD helps fund NCJW/Cleveland’s programming for women, children and families. ncjwcleveland.org

The Shabbos Project The Shabbos Project returns to Northeast Ohio on Nov. 10 with its annual challah bake. “Challah in the CLE” will bring together more than 1,000 women and girls to inspire, connect and make challah at the Huntington Convention Center of Cleveland in downtown Cleveland. Tickets include free valet, two challahs, an apron and more. shabbosprojectcle.com

Cleveland Jewish News For The Shabbos Project’s challah bake in 2015, 1,060 Jewish women and girls packed the grand ballroom at Landerhaven in Mayfield Heights.

Receive information about Jstyle events in your inbox. Visit jstylemagazine.com/signup.

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OPENERS

the chai life YLD Big Event Join the Jewish Federation of Cleveland on Nov. 19 for the Young Leadership Division’s signature fundraising event of the year, the YLD Big Event, in support of the 2017 Campaign for Jewish Needs. Celebrate for a cause with cocktails, music and more. jewishcleveland.org

Cleveland Orchestra

Jewish Federation of Cleveland Co-chairs Lindsay and David Toth, Josh Acks, and co-chairs Sam and Shayne Krichevsky celebrate for a cause at the Jewish Federation of Cleveland’s 2015 YLD Big Event. Publisher’s Note: David Toth is a member of the CJPC Board of Directors.

Superman, the world-renowned comic book superhero created in Cleveland by Jerry Siegel and Joe Shuster, will be honored by the Cleveland Orchestra, a world-class institution, during “Superman at the Symphony” on Oct. 30 at Severance Hall. clevelandorchestra.com

Election Day

Mandel JCC Cleveland Jewish Book Festival

Every election is important, but presidential elections carry with them an additional level of importance. Election Day is Nov. 8, and the deadline to register to vote in Ohio is Oct. 11. sos.state.oh.us

Howie Mandel Comedian and “America’s Got Talent” judge Howie Mandel performs Oct. 23 at the Hard Rock Rocksino Northfield Park. hrrocksinonorthfieldpark.com

Old Jews Telling Jokes The joke-telling web series “Old Jews Telling Jokes” takes its not-so-kosher humor to the stage for an Oct. 18 performance at EJ Thomas Hall that will showcase five actors in comedic performances that pay tribute to – and reinvent – classic jokes. uaevents.com

Joel Grey

Cleveland Jewish News

About 45 artists participated in the 2014 Temple Israel Sisterhood’s Art & Jewish Food Festival.

The Mandel JCC Cleveland Jewish Book Festival will take place from Nov. 13-21. This year’s keynote speaker is Northeast Ohio native Joel Grey, who at a Nov. 14 event will discuss with CJN theater critic Bob Abelman his career as a Tony-, Golden Globe- and Oscar-winning actor, producer and director – all subjects of his memoir, “Master of Ceremonies.” mandeljcc.org

Temple Israel Sisterhood’s Art & Jewish Food Festival Art enthusiasts and foodies – along with the rest of the community, of course – will come together to enjoy the biennial Temple Israel Sisterhood’s Art and Jewish Food Festival on Nov. 13 at Temple Israel Akron. Take in works from nature photographers, woodworkers and jewelry artists, among others, while noshing on potato knishes, noodle kugel, pastries and more. templeisraelakron.org

Looking for a Jewish young professionals group in which to get involved? Visit jstylemagazine.com/yp.

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Destination:

DOWNTOWN Cleveland’s core underwent a makeover this year. From the welcoming new-look Public Square, which is home to REBoL, an urban bistro committed to health consciousness, to the 32-floor Hilton Cleveland Downtown, which adds to the city skyline as it gives visitors an up-close overview, there’s plenty new to see and do.

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Fashion Coordinator Julia Brown Makeup Elizabeth Cook

Hair Leah Sanford Salon Lofts Woodmere Photography Casey Rearick Casey Rearick Photo

jstylemagazine.com


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Fall 2016

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FASHION

destination: downtown

Light gray “swacket” by Raffi, black henley by PYA and jet black jeans by Alberto Denim, all from Ticknors Men’s Clothier

Griffen Weisberg

Age: 25 Home: Downtown Cleveland Synagogue: Anshe Chesed Fairmount Temple Business: Organic food broker at J.W. Sales & Marketing in Beachwood

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Eyewear at The Hamptons Is Celebrating 20 Years!

Paula Sedar and Kathy Leoni (owners)

EYEGLASS CONTEST

Join Us in our celebration as we give away FREE EYEGLASSES to anyone that guesses the number of frames we have in the store! Come in, look around and write down your guess. Or, email your guess to: eyegals@aol.com or fax to: 216-514-3323. Include your name and phone number. All Entries must be received by MON. NOV. 7 We will announce all winners on Election Day, Tues.

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FASHION

destination: downtown

Alyssa Rothstein

Age: 23 Home: Cleveland Heights Synagogue: The Temple-Tifereth Israel Business: Development associate at The Montefiore Foundation in Beachwood

Black dress with leather waist and accents by The Kooples from Kilgore Trout

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FASHION

DESTINATION: DOWNTOWN

Doug Rosenthal

Age: 25 Home: Downtown Cleveland Synagogue: Chabad of Cleveland Business: Mortgage banker at Quicken Loans in Cleveland

Chocolate brown tweed windowpane sport coat by Canali, shirt by Giannetto Portofino and trousers by Hiltl, all from Kilgore Trout

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FASHION

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Amanda Shvets

Age: 28 Home: Willoughby Synagogue: Anshe Chesed Fairmount Temple Business: Account manager at Zig Marketing in Cleveland

Navy dress with lace accents by The Kooples and studded bracelet by Eddie Borgo, both from Kilgore Trout

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FASHION

DESTINATION: DOWNTOWN

Public Square Following a 15-month, $50 million transformation, Public Square is now an inviting, welcoming city park where audiences can gather on the Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel Concert Hill for performances and social events, families can enjoy the playful reflecting pool or wide open green space, and downtown residents and employees can take advantage of a weekly farmers market, visiting food trucks, or regularly scheduled yoga and fitness classes. Clockwise from left: Griffen wears a button-up flannel and jeans by Etro, and Matlock Cotton Workshirt by RRL & Co. on Page 17, all from Kilgore Trout; Doug wears a flannel shirt by Bespoken and jeans by S.M.N., and jacket by Waterville on Page 16, all from Kilgore Trout; Alyssa wears zipper-back hi-lo top by Weston Wear from Audrey’s Sweet Threads; and Amanda wears a plaid shirt by Philosophy, square scoop reversible tank by A’nue Ligne, gold earrings, zircon bracelet and tote by Sondra Roberts, all from Bonnie’s Goubaud, and gray jeans by L’Agence from Kilgore Trout Apples from Woolf Farms at North Union Farmers Market on Public Square

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FASHION

DESTINATION: DOWNTOWN

REBoL

Brought to Public Square by the same team behind TownHall Ohio City, REBoL is a 100 percent non-GMO urban café that “refuses to compromise or conform to the low food standards held throughout the world,” whether through its signature “bols,” which include many gluten-free, paleofriendly and vegan options, or its organic coffee bar. Eat inside its colorful dining room or outside on picnic tables, where you can people watch or challenge friends to a game of table tennis.

Clockwise from left: Amanda wears a Lottie tank by Single and straight-leg pull-on jeans by Beija Flor, both from Audrey’s Sweet Threads; Doug wears a vest by Waterville, shirt by Eton and Apex jeans by AG, all from Kilgore Trout; Alyssa wears a Plaid dress by L’Agence from Kilgore Trout The Paleo Smoothie, made with blueberry, banana, bone broth protein, flax, coconut and almond milk, by REBoL

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FASHION

DESTINATION: DOWNTOWN

Hilton Cleveland Downtown At 374 feet tall, the 32-floor Hilton Cleveland Downtown is the newest addition to Cleveland’s skyline. The 600-room hotel pays homage to its hometown with design elements that serve as nods to the city’s industry and geography, and it showcases local artists by adorning its walls with their work. As for food and drink, Zack Bruell serves as restaurant consultant for The Burnham, and over cocktails, visitors can take in sweeping views of Lake Erie from Bar 32.

Below, from left: Alyssa wears a Callista shift dress and Bask In Wicker clutch, both from Lilly Pulitzer; Amanda wears a Bianca sequin dress by Single and earrings from Audrey’s Sweet Threads, and gold shoes from Clothes Mentor; Doug wears a jacket by Tallia, patterned shirt by Ike Behar, tie by Bruno Piattelli and dress slacks by Riviera, all from Ticknors Men’s Clothier; Griffen wears a lavender and blue plaid sport coat by Coppley, dress shirt by Ike Behar, paisley tie by Alberto Zimni, pocket square by Bruno Piattelli and French blue dress pants by Riviera, all from Ticknors Men’s Clothier.

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RANGE ROVER SPORT

$749 PER MONTH *

ENDLESS PERFORMANCE. 2016 RANGE ROVER SPORT SE UNRIVALED CAPABILITY. 33 month lease. $5,995 due at * signing. $0 securityMONTH deposit. Excludes $749 PER taxes, title, license and fees.

2016 RANGE ROVER SPORT SE Range Roverlease. Sport is$5,995 the mostdue agile, 33 month atdynamic and responsive Land Rover vehicle ever. signing. $0 security deposit. Excludes Supported by license the latestand Terrain Response® 2 taxes, title, fees. †

technology , capable of adapting to changing road conditions seamlessly.

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Land Rover Master Sales Guide

Range Rover Sport is the most agile, dynamic Jaguar Silver Certified Sales Consultant Jaguar-Land Rover Westside and responsive Land Rover vehicle ever. mkane@gomontrose.com 9600 Brookpark Supported byRd the latest Terrain Response® 2 Cell: 216-577-7557 Cleveland, Ohio 44129 of adapting to changing † , capable technology Michael S. Kane 216-351-9999 road conditions seamlessly. Land Rover Master Sales Guide www.landroverwestside.com

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Jaguar-Land Rover*Westside * $749 PER MONTH mkane@gomontrose.com *2016 Range Rover Sport SE 3.0 Liter LR-V6 Supercharged. 33 month lease, $5,995 due at signing includes $4,451 down, $0 security deposit, PER MONTH $795 acquisition fee and first month’s payment, excludes retailer fees, taxes, title and registration fees. Actual rates and payments of closed-end 9600 Brookpark Rd Cell: 216-577-7557 2016 ROVER SPORT SE lease RANGE may vary. For well qualified lessees as determined by approved lender. All amounts shown are estimates, retailer sets actual amounts. For special lease SE terms,Ohio take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 9/30/16. Lessee responsible for insurance, maintenance, excess wear and NGE ROVER 33 SPORT Cleveland, 44129 month due at on MSRP of $73,745 (includes destination and delivery, Climate Comfort Package, Contrast excess mileagelease. over 27,500$5,995 miles at $0.30/mile. Based Fixed Panoramic Roof, Meridian Sound, Ebony Morzine Headliner & Vision and Convenience Package) with a residual value of $50,147 as of h lease. $5,995signing. due at $0 security deposit. Excludes 216-351-9999 08/02/16. Supplies are limited. Residency restrictions apply. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at lease end at price negotiated with retailer and approved at signing. Termination fee may apply. Land Rover or approved lender may rescind or amend this offer without notice. See taxes, title,lender license and fees. $0 security deposit. Excludes www.landroverwestside.com Michael Kane at Land Rover Westside or call 216-577-7557 for complete details e, license and fees. www.jaguarwestside.com

Range Rover Sport is the most agile, dynamic and responsive Land Rover vehicle ever. *2016 Range Rover Sport SE 3.0 Liter LR-V6 Supercharged. 33 month lease, $5,995 due at signing includes $4,451 down, $0 security deposit, ® over Sport is the most agile, dynamic Supported byfee the latest Terrain Response 2 fees, taxes, $795 acquisition and first month’s payment, excludes retailer title and registration fees. Actual rates and payments of closed-end To get expert advice on sales and leasing lease may vary. † For well qualified lessees as determined by approved lender. All amounts shown are estimates, retailer sets actual amounts. , capable of adapting to changing technology onsive Land Rover vehicle ever. For special lease terms, take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 9/30/16. Lessee responsible Michael S. Kanefor insurance, maintenance, excess wear and call Michael Kane... road conditions seamlessly. excess mileage over 27,500 miles at $0.30/mile. Based on MSRP of $73,745 (includes destination and delivery, ® Land Rover Master Sales GuideClimate Comfort Package, Contrast

ed by the latest Terrain Response 2 Ebony Morzine Headliner & Vision Fixed Panoramic Roof, Meridian Sound, and Convenience Package) with a residual value of $50,147 as of Jaguar Silver Certified Sales Consultant 08/02/16. Supplies are limited. Residency restrictions apply. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at lease end at price negotiated with retailer * adapting to changing gy†, capable ofJaguar-Land $749 PER MONTH and approved lender at signing. Termination fee may apply. Land Rover or approved lender may rescind or amend this offer without notice. See Rover Westside Michael S. Kane mkane@gomontrose.com Michael Kane at Land RoverSPORT Westside SE or call 216-577-7557 for complete details 2016 RANGE ROVER ditions seamlessly. 9600 Brookpark Rd Land Rover Master Sales216-577-7557 Guide Cell: 33 month lease. Cleveland, Ohio $5,995 44129due at Jaguar Silver Certified Sales Consultant signing. $0 security deposit. Excludes 216-351-9999 taxes, title, license and fees. Westside mkane@gomontrose.com www.landroverwestside.com Range Rover Sport is the most agile, dynamic www.jaguarwestside.com Cell: 216-577-7557

and Rover okpark Rd d, Ohio 44129 and responsive Land Rover vehicle ever. *2016 Range Rover Sport SE 3.0 Liter LR-V6 Supercharged. 33 month Supported by the latest Terrain Response 2 lease, $5,995 due at signing includes $4,451 down, $0 security deposit, $795 acquisition fee and first month’s payment, excludes retailer fees, taxes, title and registration fees. Actual rates and payments of closed-end 9999 , capable of adapting to changing technology lease may vary. For well qualified lessees as determined by approved lender. All amounts shown are estimates, retailer sets actual amounts. Michael S. Kane Forroad special conditions lease terms, takeseamlessly. new retail delivery from dealer stock by 9/30/16. Lessee for insurance, maintenance, excess wear and Landresponsible Rover Master Sales Guide droverwestside.com excess mileage over 27,500 miles at $0.30/mile. Based on MSRP of $73,745 (includes destination and delivery, Climate Comfort Package, Contrast Jaguar Silver Certified Sales Consultant Fixed Panoramic Roof, Meridian Sound, Ebony Morzine Headliner & Vision and Convenience Package) with a residual value of $50,147 as of uarwestside.com 08/02/16. Supplies are limited. Residency restrictions apply. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at lease end at price negotiated with retailer Jaguar-Land Rover Westside mkane@gomontrose.com ®

HOMEMADE CLASSICS

and approved lender at signing. Termination fee may apply. Land Rover or approved lender may rescind or amend this offer without notice. See 9600 Brookpark Rd Michael Kane at Land Rover Westside or call 216-577-7557 for complete details Cell: 216-577-7557

*

Ohio 44129lease, $5,995 due at signing includes $4,451 down, $0 security deposit, ver Sport SE 3.0 Liter LR-V6Cleveland, Supercharged. 33 month fee and first month’s payment, excludes retailer fees, taxes, title and registration fees. Actual rates and payments of closed-end 216-351-9999 For well qualified lessees aswww.landroverwestside.com determined by approved lender. All amounts shown are estimates, retailer sets actual amounts. e terms, take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 9/30/16. Lessee responsible for insurance, maintenance, excess wear and www.jaguarwestside.com over 27,500 miles at $0.30/mile. Based on MSRP of $73,745 (includes destination and delivery, Climate Comfort Package, Contrast c Roof, Meridian Sound, Ebony Morzine Headliner & Vision and Convenience Package) with a residual value of $50,147 as of *2016 Range Rover Sport SE 3.0 Liter LR-V6 Supercharged. 33 month lease, $5,995 due at signing includes $4,451 down, $0 security deposit, es are limited. Residency restrictions apply. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at registration lease end price retailer $795 acquisition fee and first month’s payment, excludes retailer fees, taxes, title and fees.at Actual ratesnegotiated and payments ofwith closed-end vary. For wellLand qualified lesseesor as approved determined by lender approved may lender.rescind All amounts are estimates, retailer sets actual amounts.See nder at signing. Terminationlease fee may may apply. Rover orshown amend this offer without notice. For special lease terms, take new retail delivery from dealer stock by 9/30/16. Lessee responsible for insurance, maintenance, excess wear and t Land Rover Westside or call 216-577-7557 for complete details excess mileage over 27,500 miles at $0.30/mile. Based on MSRP of $73,745 (includes destination and delivery, Climate Comfort Package, Contrast

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Fixed Panoramic Roof, Meridian Sound, Ebony Morzine Headliner & Vision and Convenience Package) with a residual value of $50,147 as of 08/02/16. Supplies are limited. Residency restrictions apply. Lessee has option to purchase vehicle at lease end at price negotiated with retailer and approved lender at signing. Termination fee may apply. Land Rover or approved lender may rescind or amend this offer without notice. See Michael Kane at Land Rover Westside or call 216-577-7557 for complete details

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Vanni Wang 27600 Chagrin Blvd · Woodmere · OH 44122 440-815-1860 · Luciovanni.com Fall 2016

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FASHION

destination: downtown

From left: Griffen wears a navy blue windowpane suit by Samuelsohn, shirt by Eton of Sweden and tie by Etro, all from Kilgore Trout; Amanda wears a V-neck LS ruched dress by Clara Sunwoo, silver earrings by BeJe Designs, zircon link bracelet and purse by Sondra Roberts, all from Bonnie’s Goubaud Behind Griffen are, at top, “Color Palette,” stainless steel and stained glass artwork by Cleveland artist Jerry Schmidt, and at bottom, commissioned canvases from enrollees of the Cuyahoga County Board of Developmental Disabilities Behind Doug on Page 22, “Teach Me To Rock, Teach Me To Roll, Teach Me To Shake & Teach Me To Shimmy” by Timothy Callaghan

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1017_ClothesMentorSweetest3x7_1

10/12/2012

2:08 PM

Page 1

1017_ClothesMentorSweetest3x7_1 10/12/2012 2:08 PM Page 1 1017_ClothesMentorSweetest3x7_1 10/12/2012 2:08 PM

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RESALE DONE RIGHT

Page 1

Page 1

We buy and sell

MEN’S CLOTHING EVENT with David Newlove, Boglioli North America Managing Director

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 15

Fall Fall

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28601 CHAGRIN BLVD AT ETON KILGORETROUT.COM

We buy and sell We buy and sell brand name, brand name, gently - used in-style gently - used in-style fashions fashions EVERYDAY. EVERYDAY. OF THE• BRANDS JeansSOME • Shirts Dresses Pants SOME OF•THE Jeans • Shirts • BRANDS Dresses • Pants WE BUY FROM YOU… WE FROM YOU… Blazers • BUY Purses ann taylor• lSkirts b.makowsky l coach Blazers • Skirts • Purses ann taylor l b.makowsky l coach chico’s | dooney burke l j.More crew Accessories &&Much chico’s | dooney burke l j.More crew Accessories &&Much limited | lulu lemon | michael kors Wepay pay We limited | lulu lemon | michael kors For ALL Women Sizes 0-16, nordstrom | talbots | vera bradley A STORE for A ALL LL Women sizes cashonon 1x, 2x, 3x &For ALL Women 0-16, nordstrom | talbotsSizes | vera bradley cash Maternity 0-16, 1x, 2x, 3x, & Maternity Sizes 0-26 and maternity 1x, 2x, 3x & Maternity Sizes 0-26 and maternity thespot! spot! Sizes 0-26 and maternity the Sizes 0-26 and maternity

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25373Lorain LorainRd. Rd. 6145Mayfield MayfieldRd. Rd. Mayfield 15143 PearlRd. Rd. 25373 6145 15143 Pearl 25373Lorain Lorain Rd. 6145 Rd. 15143Pearl PearlRd. Rd. 25373 Rd. 6145 Mayfield Rd. 15143 NORTHOMSTED OMSTED MAYFIELD HTS STRONGSVILLE NORTH MAYFIELD HTS STRONGSVILLE NORTH OMSTED MAYFIELD HTS STRONGSVILLE NORTH OMSTED MAYFIELD HTS STRONGSVILLE 440-617-6013 440-617-6013 440-646-9640 440-646-9640 440-238-8300 440-238-8300 440-617-6013 440-646-9640 440-238-8300 440-617-6013 440-646-9640 440-238-8300

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Inside the Mall at Eton Chagrin Blvd. M-SAT, 10-5:30

216.831.42500

www.BonniesGoubaud.com Friend Us On Facebook jstylemagazine.com

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FASHION

BEAUTY

Purely

pomegranate By Kristen Mott

Not only is pomegranate a superfruit with amazing health benefits, it serves as a symbol of abundance for Rosh Hashanah. This antioxidant-rich fruit also provides an abundance of benefits when used in skincare and beauty items. From pomegranate seed oil to pure pomegranate juice, businesses are finding new ways to take advantage of this fruit’s natural properties.

Chagrin Valley Soap & Salve Goji berry antioxidant soap and pomegranate facial oil

Gwendolyn Elizabeth Cold-processed pomegranate lime soap and pomegranate bath bombs

Sephora Sephora Collection eye mask in pomegranate and Sephora Collection face mask in pomegranate

Glenn Avenue Soap Company Pomegranate exfoliating soap

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30%-70% OFF REGULAR PRICE

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17 Cha 17 N. Franklin Street, Chagrin Falls, OH 44022 440.893.7000 MON-SAT 9:30AM-5:30PM jstylemagazine.com

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FASHION

staff pick - ohio city

Ohio City shopping Story by Kristen Mott Photography by Michael C. Butz Located just west of downtown Cleveland, Ohio City has long been known as the home of the historic West Side Market. But over the last decade or so, a revitalization has taken place in Ohio City, leading to the creation of numerous breweries, restaurants and bars. Sprinkled alongside these establishments are independent boutiques and shops, offering everything from apparel and accessories to art and home dĂŠcor. Tree-lined streets and the renovated Market Square Park make this walkable neighborhood an ideal place to spend an afternoon.

Room Service Patrons will find an eclectic mix of items at Room Service, a lifestyle boutique on West 25th Street just south of Lorain Avenue. From flowy shirts and dresses to home decor and gift items, this colorful shop offers plenty to choose from, whether shopping for oneself or a loved one.

From left: Leather wristlets by Studio One and handmade ceramic bowls by Moonbird Pottery

Striped top by Mod Ref, khaki pants by Benson, silkcotton blend scarf by Marquet

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KNUTH’S

SPRING TRUNK SHOW

Tom and Linda Platt February 25th-26th Sophisticated, effortless collection of day dresses & separates, cocktail & gowns

30619 Pinetree Rd Pepper Pike (216)831-1116 26141 Detroit Rd Westlake (440)871-7800

www.knuths.com

Eton Chagrin Boulevard • 28601 Chagrin Blvd. 216-464-0800

TCJAN16

Comfort Quality Care The way dentistry should feel!

Cleveland’s Premier Cosmetic Dental Practice

Paul Mikhli, DDS Member of the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry

3690 Orange Place, Suite 540, Beachwood, OH 44122 www.beachwooddental.com | 216.831.5661 jstylemagazine.com

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FASHION

STAFF PICK - OHIO CITY Blackbird Fly Boutique Inspired by The Beatles song, Blackbird Fly Boutique offers contemporary and versatile apparel, denim, footwear and accessories to take an individual from day to night. The store, on West 28th Street north of Lorain Avenue, also houses a small men’s section as well as candles, lotions and soaps, and handmade local goods. Top by Karen Zambos, vegan leather braided pants by Blank NYC

Avalanche vest by Pink Stitch, split side tank by Jack Meets Kate, denim by Agave and leather purse by Baggu

Clockwise from left: Aftershave by Gentlemen of Greatness in Loveland, face and beard wash brick by Cliff Original in Columbus, wallet by People’s Leather in Columbus, beanie hat by King & Fifth Supply Co. in Columbus, hair wax by Cliff Original and mustache wax by Gentlemen of Greatness

Salty Not Sweet

Canopy Collective Canopy Collective is a unique space, mixing locally made products with retro home decor, glassware and restored furniture. The store, on Lorain Avenue near West 41st Street, also doubles as an event space and art gallery, showcasing canvas prints and photography by Northeast Ohio-based artists.

The sense of Cleveland pride is strong the moment you walk inside Salty Not Sweet, a boutique on West 25th Street offering handmade and vintage items. The store carries Cleveland-centric T-shirts, glassware, postcards and wall prints. In addition, the boutique features handmade jewelry and candles from small businesses in Ohio and beyond. From top: An NBA Jamthemed T-shirt, just in time for the Cavs’ 2016-17 season, by Ape Made in Cleveland, and earrings by Little Pancakes

Wood cutting boards, salt and pepper shakers, and rolling pins by Sawhorse Woodworks in Cleveland Goat’s milk lip balm and other skin care products by Stanton’s Handmade in Lakewood

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Relax and Enjoy the Experience at Audrey’s Sweet Threads Fall has never been so fun!

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FASHION

DAPPER MAN

Cool coats

Warm but light

By Carlo Wolff

A word to the wise when it comes to the new, slimmed-down men’s outerwear: You can argue about man’s role in climate change, but whatever the cause, it’s getting warmer. What that means is that men’s fall and winter outerwear is lighter than it used to be. Full-zip sweater coats are shouldering heavy topcoats aside, and parkas and winter jackets are more “technical.” The climate is changing, and fashion is adapting.

From top: Men’s Far Northern Waterproof Parka, Men’s Metro Mountain Jacket and Men’s Thermoball Snow Triclimate Parka, all from The North Face

Functional and flexible 100 percent Merino wool sweater jacket by Byford from Ticknors Men’s Clothier

Shorter and slimmer Shearling chest coat with alpaca-blend knit back and sleeve by Gimos from Ticknors Men’s Clothier

Comfy and casual

From left: Cotton and microfiber blend sweater jacket by Nicoby and fullzip, fleece-lined sweater by Tommy Bahama, both from Ticknors Men’s Clothier

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Cuyahoga Community College Foundation in partnership with

invites you to attend the 2016 PRESIDENTIAL SCHOLARSHIP LUNCHEON Benefiting Scholarships for Tri-C Students

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Ted Koppel

Author and Journalist TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2016 11:25 A .M. – 1:05 P.M.

For ticket and table information, please call the Cuyahoga Community College Foundation at 216-987-4868 or visit www.tri-c.edu/donate to purchase tickets.

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REN AIS SA N CE CLE VEL A ND HOTEL


ASK ELANA

DATING. LOVE. LIFE.

Establish high standards Dear Elana,

I’m a 24-year-old Jewish guy, and I’ve never had a serious girlfriend. I’ve dated girls, but never for more than a couple of months. I’ve never been in love, met a girl’s parents or celebrated an anniversary. I’m seeing someone now, but I don’t feel chemistry with her. I feel stuck; the girls whom I’m interested in don’t like me,

and I’m not attracted to the girls who do like me. It seems like my only options are to remain single (which I don’t want), or to be in a relationship with someone I’m not that excited about. What do you recommend? – Seeking True, Affectionate, Lasting Love Every Day

Dear STALLED,

Before you go prancing off into La La Land and chasing Natalie Portman, make sure that your high standard is your deepest, most authentic desire. Are a fit waistline, firm skin and stylish outfits the traits that elevate someone in your book? Are they the qualities that will bring you meaningful, profound satisfaction for decades to come? Probably not. So, let’s take a moment to figure out what a 10 really looks like for you. Start by identifying the qualities that you really want and that you honestly value. Create a list of 10 to 20 items that absolutely make you swoon, the ones that you wouldn’t want to live without. This list will be different for everyone, however it is likely to include qualities such as intelligence, emotional stability, honesty and loyalty. Are creativity, athleticism, sense of humor, and Jewish values on your list? What about lifestyle, sense of adventure, financial responsibility and value in education? Determine the most important qualities

One of the issues I come across most often in my coaching practice is settling. That is, dating someone who doesn’t make your heart skip a beat, but whom you date because you don’t think you can do any better. I see this most often with men, but women do it too. Here’s why it’s a bad idea, and why you deserve to find your match. You have probably heard of people being rated by numbers. A gorgeous model is a 10, a real shtunk is a 1. But the thing to remember is that these numbers are subjective. Your 6 is another guy’s 10, and your 10 is someone else’s 6. The same is true of your number. One person might see you as a 4 and someone else might see you as a 9. You owe it to yourself to avoid dating the people who diminish your value, and to only give your heart to the people who admire and cherish you. Few of us grow up believing that we need to have low standards. Something

happens in our adolescence or adulthood that wounds our egos and diminishes our selfconfidence. We experience some form of rejection and don’t want to get hurt again. It feels safer to date someone beneath us, someone who will be grateful to get hitched to us. But there’s a problem with this logic. Just because we perceive our partners as being lower status does not mean they see themselves that way. A “low-status” partner is not more likely to adore you than a high-status partner. Here’s why: If you see your girlfriend as a 6, you will treat her like a 6, and she will have little incentive to stay. Then, when you’re kicked to the curb you tell yourself, “I can’t even keep a 6, I better lower my standards to a 4.” That’s a recipe for unhappiness. You would be much better off shooting for an 8, 9 or 10 next time, because you will treat this new prospect with love, respect and admiration – and that will hold her interest. Now, let’s clarify what it means to attract a 10.

that you look for in a mate and write them down. Now, you have a succinct list of the qualities that would make a person compatible with you, a really good fit for the long haul. If you meet someone who is OK, but who doesn’t quite meet your standards, don’t get involved. Really. You don’t have to settle. While dating may be fun and silly, love is a serious business, especially when you are thinking about creating a life with someone. You want to make sure that your better half lives up to the title. Settling leads to disappointment and regret. Hold out for that astonishing person who will captivate you, who will understand how you feel through thick and thin, and who will be your best friend. That person is out there and is looking for you. Elana Hunter is a dating coach and psychotherapist who is passionate about helping singles find love. To learn more, visit kickstartlove.com.

Looking for love? Send your dating questions to AskElana@jstylemagazine.com.

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Julie Kronenberg holds a photo of her dancing with her grandfather, Jacob Hennenberg, a Holocaust survivor during a 2001 Kol Israel dinner held in honor of him. Behind her are several of her grandfather’s paintings, and the Beachwood house in which she now lives was once her grandparents’ home.

3G

COVERAGE

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Third-generation Holocaust survivors in Northeast Ohio step up to keep remembrance top of mind By Kristen Mott

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“To forget the dead would be akin to killing them a second time.” Three months after Elie Wiesel’s death July 2, these powerful words – taken from his book, “Night,” his memoir of horrors he witnessed as a teenager during the Holocaust – carry a little more weight than they used to. An Auschwitz survivor and Nobel Laureate, Wiesel was a vocal advocate for not letting the atrocities millions of Jews experienced at the hands of Nazis during World War II fade from memory – and he was arguably the most prominent. After all, “Night” has educated generations of American children about the Holocaust since it was published in English in 1960 and included in middle- and high-school lesson plans across the country. His passing served as a stark reminder that the number of Holocaust survivors left, including here in Northeast Ohio, is dwindling. However, their legacies live on through their children, and increasingly, through their grandchildren, so-called thirdgeneration survivors, most of whom are millennials or members of Generation X. As the last remaining eyewitnesses to the Holocaust depart, this next generation works to keep Holocaust remembrance at the forefront in the 21st century.

Personal connection Julie Kronenberg’s love for her grandfather, Jacob Hennenberg, is evident. After moving back to Cleveland from New York a couple of years ago, Kronenberg, 33, purchased

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her grandfather’s home in Beachwood, where she now lives with her husband, David, and their two young daughters, Lily and Hannah. Her walls are decorated with her grandfather’s paintings, which depict memories of his life. And a large wooden bookcase is filled with Hennenberg’s books and dozens of binders that hold letters, postcards and artifacts he collected after World War II. The strong sense of pride she has for her grandfather can be felt as she points out his artwork and smiles as she recalls past memories of him. Hennenberg, who died May 22, 2014, was born in Oswiecim, Poland. He was 15 years old when the war started and was sent to various forced labor camps and concentration camps. He and his sister were the only two from his immediate family to survive the Holocaust. Following the war, he left Poland for Germany, where he met his wife, Hilda. The couple moved to America in 1949. Hennenberg talked openly about his experiences with Kronenberg, and always tried to cast them in a positive light. “In general he wanted people to talk about the Holocaust and remember it, to remember the survivors’ names and the victims’ names,” she says. “He didn’t really focus on the horrific parts, of which there were many. He zeroed in on the one miraculous thing that happened in each instance, like the few kind German policemen who offered to make Aryan

identification papers for him or help him in the future should their paths cross again, or the kind Germans who discreetly left him a piece of bread while he was imprisoned in various camps. He focused more on how lucky he was.” In Cleveland, Hennenberg served as a historian for the Kol Israel Foundation, a nonprofit organization of Jewish Holocaust survivors, their families and supporters, and designed the Tree of Life relief sculpture inside Congregation Shaarey Tikvah in Beachwood in memory of those whose lives were cut short by the Holocaust. He also was a prolific writer, and asked Kronenberg to type up many of the stories he had written in order to preserve them. Kronenberg’s personal connection to her grandfather drives her to keep memories of the Holocaust alive. She’s spoken at the Maltz Museum of Jewish Heritage in Beachwood about her grandfather’s story and hopes to become more involved with Face to Face, a Holocaust educational program at Shaarey Tikvah. She’s also creating a memoir that details her grandfather’s life story. “Thankfully, we still have survivors to tell their own stories, but pretty soon we won’t. The next generations will have to step up to the plate and share the stories of people

they knew and of their loved ones because there won’t be anyone else to tell those stories,” she says. Like other third-generation survivors, Kronenberg embraces the digital age in how she remembers the Holocaust. Her father created jacobhennenberg.com about eight years ago. Kronenberg now keeps it up to date with photos of her grandfather, images of his paintings and other artwork, and videos of him speaking at various Holocaust-related events. “It was very important to him that this information be accessible and that people be able to hear the truth about what happened,” Kronenberg says. “Unfortunately, there are many Holocaust deniers. As we say goodbye to the last eyewitnesses it’s going to be harder to refute them if people don’t know the stories.”

Family matters While some Holocaust survivors speak openly about their experiences, others keep them private. Such was the case with Hallie Duchon’s maternal grandparents. Her grandmother, Regina Schoenberg, was born in Ciechanów, Poland, in 1916. She was sent to Auschwitz and was the only one out of her seven siblings to survive. She died in 1958 of a brain aneurysm.

“Unfortunately, there are many Holocaust deniers. As we say goodbye to the last eyewitnesses it’s going to be harder to refute them if people don’t know the stories.” Julie Kronenberg Third-generation Holocaust survivor Fall 2016

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“As a Holocaust survivor, I was taught from a very early age that I stayed alive and that I will have to make up for all the people who didn’t stay alive, and that what I do in my life and what I do with my life is a big responsibility.” Eva Kahana Holocaust survivor

Eva Kahana, a Holocaust survivor and Case Western Reserve University professor, shares a Swedish Schutz-Pass, meant to protect Jews during the Holocaust, in the living room of her University Heights home.

Duchon’s grandfather, George Schoenberg, was born in Warsaw, Poland, in 1914. He was put into the Warsaw ghetto in April 1941 and was sent to various labor camps before spending about 18 months in Auschwitz. He was eventually put on a death march with 500 Jewish people and was one of only 31 to survive. He was liberated in May 1945. Of his three siblings, he was the only one to survive. Regina and George met after the war and married in 1945. Together with Regina’s cousin, they hitchhiked across borders into Germany. Regina urged George to relocate to Cleveland, since she had family here. They immigrated to America in 1948, and after a year of George working two

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jobs, they had saved enough money to purchase their own home. Duchon, a member of Temple Emanu El in Orange, says that as a child, she didn’t understand the scope of what her grandparents lived through. “We would go to Kol Israel events with him but I didn’t really understand it,” says Duchon, 44, who lives in Solon with her husband, Ryan, their son Jake, 13, and their daughter Marlee, 10. “I would see people there and they would speak Yiddish, and I knew a lot of them came from the same area, but I didn’t really understand what they went through.” After college, Duchon began researching her family history,

reading books and watching movies about the Holocaust, and speaking with survivors. She also became involved with the Kol Israel Foundation, of which her grandfather served as a founding member. Although she didn’t have many conversations with her grandparents about the Holocaust, she feels it still had a strong impact on her life. “My mother being secondgeneration, she was raised so differently than other people I know whose parents were not in the Holocaust. We were always told, ‘you’re strong, this is where you come from, don’t give up.’ That’s how I was raised, and that’s how I feel toward my children, too,” she says. Duchon takes pride in passing on these lessons to her children – something she suggests other thirdgeneration survivors can do since they’re now of the age where their sons and daughters are old enough to understand. Duchon says her children are starting to ask more questions about their ancestors and heritage as they grow older. For Jake’s bar mitzvah this year, he did a twinning to pay homage to a Jewish boy who perished during the Holocaust and was never able to be a bar mitzvah. Duchon recently witnessed firsthand how her grandparents’ experiences are shaping her

children’s lives. During the first week of school at Solon Middle School, Marlee’s teacher asked the students to write down the 10 most important things they wanted other people to know about them. “The first thing she wrote down is that she’s a fourthgeneration Holocaust survivor. I nearly cried when I saw it,” Duchon says. “I think they’re really starting to understand how things came together and what their family went through.”

Survivor’s perspective As a distinguished sociology professor at Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Eva Kahana begins her “sociology of stress and coping” class the same way each year. On the first day, she asks each student to state his or her interests. When it’s her turn, Kahana shares that she is a child survivor of the Holocaust. More specifically, then-3year-old Eva and her mother survived because they were hidden in the “cold, damp” basement of a Protestant church. Her father, who had been sent to a slave labor camp, was just one of three people who survived and returned home. “When I teach about stress and coping, it’s from the vantage point of someone who

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“Education is the biggest tool for everyone to use to stop hate and bigotry. It’s not only about the Holocaust, it’s about any race, religion or creed. There’s so much hate going on today. What we’re trying to teach people is look at what happens when there’s so much hate, look how it starts and look what happens in the end.” Hallie Duchon Third-generation Holocaust survivor Kol Israel Foundation executive director

Kol Israel Foundation Executive Director Hallie Duchon shares a family photo from 1975 that shows her grandfather, Holocaust survivor George Schoenberg, surrounded by his grandchildren, from left, 6-year-old Ross Glick, 3-year-old Hallie and 1-year-old Corey Glick Fox.

actually almost didn’t survive,” says Kahana, 75, who now lives in University Heights with her husband, Boaz. Being on a college campus gives Kahana the chance to share her story as an eyewitness to the atrocities of the Holocaust with a younger generation. She views teaching as a way to carry on the lessons of the Holocaust. “As a Holocaust survivor, I was taught from a very early age that I stayed alive and that I will have to make up for all the people who didn’t stay alive, and that what I do in my life and what I do with my life is a big responsibility,” Kahana says.

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“With my students and the classes I teach, that’s a good way that I can convey subtly and overtly that Jewish people have suffered and that Jewish people have been at the forefront of caring for other minority groups, and yet they’re not ashamed to talk about being Jewish.” Kahana was born in Budapest, Hungary, in 1941. She and her family left Hungary in 1956 and spent eight months in Austria before immigrating to America in 1957. She married in 1962 and had two sons, Jeffrey and Michael. Passing on the value of doing good and making a

difference in the world is important to Kahana. It’s something she believes she achieved with her two sons, and she hopes her seven grandchildren will learn the same. “The real question is, how do we make sure that the kids we are raising today are going to resist any hatred toward other groups. Each person, Jewish or non-Jewish, is responsible to instill those ideals in their children,” she says. Being a professor and working with millennials on a daily basis provides Kahana a unique vantage point. She feels a connection to all minority groups, and was recently identified as an ally to the LGBT student body at CWRU. “I care about all groups that have been marginalized, persecuted, stigmatized. I think that as Jews we really have to show an example and I have to be attentive to the needs of all people who experience discrimination of any kind.” But being on campus also gives Kahana insight into the challenges facing this next generation. Kahana feels the Holocaust is no longer seen as a major issue among millennials, which she calls a “real crisis.” Giving lectures on

the Holocaust is one thing, but she believes more work must be done. She also feels that the voice of the Jews as a people is being diminished, and worries whether millennials will develop a strong Jewish identity they can be proud of. “The hardest part is to stand up for being Jewish and for recognizing that we have a right to be recognized as one of the groups that has suffered and we have a right to our own country. Being on college campuses nowadays, there’s a temptation to bypass one’s Jewish identity. I worry about the millennials … and how brave they are.”

Extending reach As the newly named executive director of the Kol Israel Foundation, Duchon says one of her main goals is to grow the number of thirdgeneration survivors within the organization. She hopes to do this by creating events and programs that are more appealing to millennials, like meet-and-greets with authors or screening films on the Holocaust. “Up until three years ago, the organization was run solely by volunteers, and when it started it was strictly social

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events. Now we’re planning different kinds of events, educational events and fundraising. It’s really changed. When I talk to people, it’s a little bit of an eye-opener, and they’re willing to get more involved now.” Duchon sees many existing opportunities in Northeast Ohio for thirdgeneration survivors to get involved, whether through fundraising to support various programs or volunteering their time. She also thinks there are opportunities for co-sponsorships with some of the Jewish institutions in the community, such as the Jewish Federation of Cleveland or the Maltz Museum. Educating the next generation is key, she says. With help from volunteers, Kol Israel has taped the testimonies of four Holocaust survivors. The videos have been shown to students within the Bedford School District and at Temple Emanu El, among other institutions. Duchon hopes to show the videos to more schools, including private Catholic schools. “Education is the biggest tool for everyone to use to stop hate and bigotry,” she says. “It’s not only about the Holocaust, it’s about any race, religion or creed. There’s so much hate going on today. What we’re trying to teach people is to look at what happens when there’s so much hate, look at how it starts and look at what happens in the end.” Now is a crucial time for third-generation survivors to become more involved, Duchon says, since many of the hot topics in the country revolve around bullying and hatred. She noted that as the number of remaining

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Holocaust survivors goes down, anti-Semitism is on the rise globally. “I feel like there are people now coming out from everywhere trying to make a difference because it’s such an important topic. I think people are realizing you can’t just stand by, you have to do something,” she says.

Moving forward It’s important to Kahana to see Holocaust remembrance carried on by future generations – something she knows will take action and commitment. “It will only carry on if people identify as Jewish,” she says. “I don’t think that non-Jews will be carrying it on. I think that it’s very much intertwined with feeling proud of being Jewish and being committed to being Jewish. … I think we need to stick together rather than be divisive.” Young people learn by example, which is why Kahana believes it’s crucial for parents and synagogues to play a role, whether it’s teaching a child Hebrew or welcoming all types of families at a congregation. She also sees opportunities for Jewish millennials to find careers that allow them to make a difference. “Maybe if millennials understand that we’re all in this together and it’s not just our past but it’s their children’s future that’s at stake, it’ll make a difference. You can remember the Holocaust and live life with gusto. Remembering the Holocaust to me is about remembering your identity,” Kahana says. Duchon hopes to see more third-generation survivors become involved in organizations like Kol Israel and attend community events related to the Holocaust. She

also encourages people to utilize their skill sets. “Everyone has something different to bring to the table,” she says. “If someone’s a teacher, they can bring their knowledge. If someone works for a corporation, they can talk about the best way to infiltrate corporations for fundraising. “It has to be ongoing. And then we have to teach the fourth generation to get involved and to keep passing the torch.” While much of Kronenberg’s efforts are self-motivated, she sees a need for Jewish institutions to lead the drive in creating more opportunities for millennials to get involved. The Jewish community in Cleveland is doing a great job when it comes to this, she says, but more work can always be done. “Because I have a personal connection and I have the interest and I feel the responsibility to share my family’s story, I’m happy to create these opportunities,” she says. “But I feel that by and large, the Jewish institutions need to help create opportunities for young people today that want to help commemorate the Holocaust or remember family or friends.

The more opportunities there are for people to get involved – to do something for a finite amount of time rather than a large commitment – I think we’ll be able to draw more and more young people in.” Third-generation survivors are taking the initiative on Holocaust remembrance and educate – whether for fellow millennials and Gen Xers or for the next generation – in ways that make sense for them. By planning community events, participating in outreach efforts, or as in Kronenberg’s case, sharing family stories, they’re increasingly establishing that Holocaust remembrance is imperative to the community. “Very few people growing up in America today have been through something as horrific as what my grandfather went through,” Kronenberg says. “His perspective on the world, I think, is important to remember. He could still think people are generally good and have hope for humanity, faith in God and the desire to make the world a better place. “I feel the need to be his voice. A huge part of me knows that this is what I need to do to honor his memory.” js

Annual Fall Memorial for Victims of the Holocaust Every year, the Kol Israel Foundation and Jewish Federation of Cleveland partner to host a fall memorial for victims of the Holocaust at Zion Memorial Park in Bedford Heights. This year’s memorial will be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Oct. 9. The event serves as a way to commemorate the lives lost and the communities that were destroyed during the Holocaust. Rabbi Matthew J. Eisenberg of Temple Israel Ner Tamid in Mayfield Heights will deliver this year’s keynote address. Memorial candles will be lit by Holocaust survivors, second-generation and thirdgeneration survivors. For more information or to view a list of upcoming Kol Israel events, visit kifcle.org.

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Nosh News Appetizing information concerning Jewish

chefs and restaurateurs in Northeast Ohio

Korean Fried Chix MxNuggets with sauce 811, scallion and sesame seeds from 811 Kitchen Bar Lounge.

New place, new experience

One of downtown Cleveland’s newest eateries, 811 Kitchen Bar Lounge, opened in late July – and is off to a good start. “It’s going really well, says Chef Jonathan Bennett, a partner at 811 as well as Moxie and Red, The Steakhouse. “It’s so different from Moxie or Red, and it’s been great to see a whole different type of customer than we’re used to.” One thing that separates the twostory, 180-seat globally influenced modern American restaurant is its diverse menu, which features a wide variety of options, including glutenfree, vegetarian and vegan. “We are not a health food place but we try very hard to cook with our guests’ health in mind,” Bennett says. Also, 811’s location has helped create a special atmosphere. “You have these 50-year-olds who are out for a game, and you have a couple of 28-year-olds chatting after work. To see that broad spectrum across the dining room has been really cool,” Bennett says. “The way the restaurant is laid out, it has such great spaces within the space – whether you’re there at 3 having sushi, at 7 having dinner, or at 10 having a drink in the lounge or at the bar.”

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Karin McKenna

Glazen and bagels

There’s a ton of buzz surrounding Cleveland’s Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood thanks to CNBC’s “Cleveland Hustles,” an eight-episode series executive produced by LeBron James that features aspiring Northeast Ohio entrepreneurs who make business presentations to investors. One of those investors is Alan Glazen of Glazen Urban, an investment and management organization focused on city neighborhoods and districts. Over the years, Glazen has invested in ABC The Tavern, XYZ The Tavern and Erie Island Coffee. On “Cleveland Hustles,” Glazen invested in The Cleveland Bagel Co. “I’m a devout bagel eater. I don’t know how you can have a bagel company with no Jewish guys, so I thought I would do them a favor and save them from that embarrassment,” Glazen jokingly told the Cleveland Jewish News. Jstyle introduced The Cleveland Bagel Co., alongside Bialy’s Bagels, to readers in 2014. To see what you might’ve missed, visit jstylemagazine.com/ rolls-with-holes.

Is the cupboard full?

Has Cleveland reached restaurant saturation? Chef and restaurateur Zack Bruell and dining editor and author Doug Trattner tackled that question July 29 at The City Club of Cleveland. It’s a particularly relevant topic considering the recent high-profile closings of Crop Group restaurants in Uptown and the Flats East Bank – and Bruell’s Kafeteria at 200 Public Square. “We need to grow, because every time a new restaurant opens up, that’s another slice of the pie,” Bruell said at The City Club. Bruell, whose workforce has grown from 25 in 2004 to 470 today, also is concerned about a diluted market for quality staff. Despite stagnant population growth, Trattner noted people are dining out more. “Eating out has taken the place of other forms of entertainment. We do business in bars and restaurants now,” he says. “Tourists are coming to Cleveland because they’ve heard so much about our food scene.” Watch or listen to the full discussion at cityclub.org.

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FOOD

FIRST COURSE

Good designer drop last

to the

At Pour Cleveland, Charlie Eisenstat is brewing something special in Cleveland’s coffee landscape – and elevating the scene in the process Story by Carlo Wolff Photography by Michael C. Butz

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FOOD

FIRST COURSE harlie Eisenstat discovered his true calling in a Washington, D.C., coffee shop. No one swallow at Chinatown Coffee turned the trick, but Eisenstat, studying there while imbibing cup after intriguing cup, began to envision a shop of his own – in his native Cleveland. Eisenstat owns Pour Cleveland, a Euclid Avenue coffee magnet a block west of East Ninth Street in downtown Cleveland. Pour, like its sturdy Italian coffeeware, is black and white, mainly white. It’s a kind of laboratory, a clean, well-lighted place known for its unique, even exotic, coffee. “I get really excited about coffees,” says Eisenstat, who lives in Rocky River with his wife, Maggie, and their 3-yearold son Desmond. “Usually, that’ll fade after a week, then the next thing excites me.” Working with a “plethora of coffees” from roasters from all over the world regularly renews his excitement. Eisenstat doesn’t drink that much coffee himself, maybe two 10-ounce cups a day, and almost all at Pour. But, he says, compared to an average cup o’ joe, “it’s way better coffee, so it goes a longer way. “I always like stuff that’s sweet, I like balance,” he says. “If a coffee can hit on everything, that’s a winner for me. A lot of coffees are very onedimensional, all sweetness or all body, so complexity is a big thing for me.” At Pour, you can get espresso. You can get cold brew iced coffee. You can try all manner of strong coffee brewed from scratch, a cup at a time, from beans sourced all over the world. Pour-over is the house specialty, and drip is available.

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You also can get a taste lesson from Eisenstat or a Pour barista eager to let you sample the latest from, say, Drop, a Swedish roaster exclusive to Pour in the United States. Coffee consumes Eisenstat now, but his path to the bean was circuitous. Eisenstat grew up in Orange, went to the former Agnon School (now the Joseph and Florence Mandel Jewish Day School) in Beachwood, graduated from high school in the Palm Beach, Fla., area, and from Miami University of Ohio in 2006, with a major in finance and a minor in micro economics. After graduating from Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, he passed the Illinois bar and then earned a master’s degree in tax law from Georgetown University in D.C. He and Maggie got married in 2010 and planned to start their life together in Chicago, “a mutual pick.” It was the depths of the Recession, however, and Eisenstat found it hard to become a partner at a law firm. So he free-lanced as an attorney and worked for a trader at the Chicago Board of Trade. He was not happy, he says, suggesting he felt like he was living someone else’s life. Finding his true path took some time. “I got into it for pretty much all the wrong reasons,” Eisenstat says of the law. “I was doing it to

Above: Owner Charlie Eisenstat behind the counter at Pour Cleveland, which he opened in 2013 at the 5th Street Arcades in downtown Cleveland. Previous page: Ethiopia Celigna from States Coffee & Mercantile, in the center row of coffee beans, is but one of many options offered at Pour.

make my dad happy; with his upbringing it was important, as it is for a lot of Jewish people, to become a professional.” His father, a doctor at Hillcrest Hospital in Mayfield Heights, died during Charlie’s last year at Cleveland-Marshall. In his college and postgraduate days, coffee barely figured. Eisenstat drank soda to keep awake during college and “wasn’t really that into coffee” – except for “dessert-type drinks like Frappucinos, a glorified coffee milk shake.” When he was at Georgetown, that began to change. “When I ended up in D.C., I found a place I could study in, Chinatown Coffee. One day I spoke to a barista there, and

he basically told me to get a pour-over coffee and told me not to put anything in it,” he says. Although he expressed “extreme doubt” that he’d like it, he did, and “that was what started the coffee bug for me. … I will always go back to that experience, showing me what coffee really could be.”

Coffee takes over

Eisenstat started following coffee sites on Twitter and read as much as he could about the bean, “probably as much as I did law.” Over time, he began to accumulate more sophisticated equipment, slowly becoming a home coffee chemist. “If you’re tasting this, adjust and do this,” he says, explaining

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Above: Pour serves salt, poppy seed, sesame seed, plain and everything bagels from The Cleveland Bagel Co. Right: The pour-over technique allows Pour baristas to do more by hand, affording them more control over the coffee-making process.

how the thinking goes. “Maybe it’s your water. Maybe it’s the coffee you’re using. Maybe you don’t have a good grinder.” His study intensified in Chicago, where he connected with Intelligentsia, a “very good roaster there.” “When we realized Chicago wasn’t working for us and decided to move back home, my wife and I started talking about what a coffee shop should be,” he says. It was the tail end of 2010 and the Cleveland coffee field was wide open. After six unhappy months in Chicago, they moved home in early 2011, and a plan began to percolate. Eisenstat joined the trust department at PNC Bank, where he was able to use some of his law background to pay the bills, continued coffee school on Twitter, and took advantage of a free subscription to Handsome Coffee, a start-up roaster in Cleveland Heights that sent him samples.

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During down time at PNC, Eisenstat devised a plan that called for Pour to open in April 2013. However, the complexity and timing of life – including the arrival of the Eisenstats’ first child – postponed its debut until that Thanksgiving.

The Pour experience

Gabe Wojnarowski, assistant manager of Pour, says he “could talk for an hour about extraction, but I’m not going to bore you.” Then, as he pours a cup, swirling the hot water over just-ground beans, he talks about extraction, a key to exceptional coffee. “The goal is to get all the sweet stuff out and not get the bitter stuff out,” he says. The idea is “to get all the yummy, sweet complexities out of it, but not to a point where it tastes, I guess, bitter. We want it to taste, like, really clean, really balanced, not too heavy,” he adds. Eirik Schmertmann, a barista, supervised the pouring of samples

of coffee at different stages, using Ethiopian Aroresa from Heart Coffee Roasters of Portland, Ore. They vary dramatically; the “final” one is sharp and bracing, with a hint of bitterness “but not too much,” says Wojnarowski, who executed the shot glass tastings. “Everything we do is very, very detailed, just to ensure the coffee is consistent,” Wojnarowski adds. “Pour-over doesn’t make coffee taste good, we make coffee taste good.” Coffee varies from farm to farm, even plant to plant, explains Schmertmann: “It’s the way the bean develops, and it can develop completely differently, with different sugars and different tastes, it’s not just origin to origin.” Different farms have different soils and plants. Many roasters will sell beans in bags listing country of origin, section, farm, even lot number. Eisenstat prizes such idiosyncracy, modeling his store on what he

and his workers enjoy in the coffee they try out. They also stress the social nature of Pour – “a welcoming, communal aspect of what we do,” he adds, citing the Judaism that figured in his upbringing. That the shop is working so well – nearing the end of its third year, Pour has grown at “almost a 30to 40-percent clip year over year,” Eisenstat says – attests to his taste and the meticulousness of his operation. Every night, the espresso machine is cleaned with citric acid compound, and “we get as finicky as going back to the water filtration system and checking the total dissolve solids to give us an idea of how the coffee’s going to perform,” clearing the water of “everything that will add taste and take away from the coffee taste,” he says.

Brewing coffee is a chemical reaction, and you need something to facilitate that reaction, he says. Pour even has a system that blends back in some mineral content of regular filtered water, allowing the coffee to brew properly. “We have a small staff but we have a dedicated staff – extremely dedicated,” Eisenstat says. “We dial and redial throughout the day to get everything tasting as good as it possibly can. We get samples sent to us from roasters all over the county; we’re selective when it comes to whatever coffees we use. “We have a good idea of what roasters are out there that we want to work with; we try to rotate them and keep it interesting for customers – and for us, too.” js

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SECOND SERVING

Sweet new year

Story by Ed Wittenberg Photography by Michael C. Butz

Dress up apples and honey this Rosh Hashanah with help from Bistro 185’s Ruth Levine

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Right: Bistro 185 co-owner Ruth Levine has all the ingredients for her honey cake and apple confit laid out while she zests a lemon and grates an apple in her home kitchen. Previous page: The finished product is as tasty as it looks.

Ruth Levine

has fond memories of growing up in a traditional Eastern European Jewish home, watching her mother cook and bake in the kitchen, especially around the Jewish holidays. “My parents were Polish, and I was always very interested in the kitchen,” says Levine, chef and co-owner with her husband, Marc, of Bistro 185 in Cleveland’s North Collinwood neighborhood. “When I started going into the restaurant business, I still kept the traditions, but with a different twist, and I developed some of my own.” With Rosh Hashanah approaching, Levine offers some more modern ways to enjoy traditional holiday foods such as apples and honey. “I do a wonderful honey cake that’s really different from what most people make,” she says. “Honey cake is super traditional during the holidays,

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because you eat honey for a sweet year, so along with a honey cake, I like to make an apple confit.” To keep the honey cake moist, Levine says she grates in an apple and uses zest and juice from an orange and a lemon. Along with the honey and some spices, she puts in “a little pinch” of black pepper. “That pepper gives it a little bit of zip, so you have contrast between the sweet and the pepper,” she says. The apple confit consists of apples cooked in a honey syrup, served alongside the honey cake. “They go together, so you get the apples and honey idea, but a little more accompaniment to your cake,” she says.

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second serving Ruth Levine’s recipes for honey cake and apple confit

Honey cake

Apple confit 3 to 4 apples cored and peeled thinly in rounds 1 cup sugar ¼ cup honey 3 cinnamon sticks ½ tsp. pure vanilla 5 whole cloves 1. Preheat oven to 275 degrees 2. Toss apple slices with the other ingredients. Place in oven-proof skillet and cover with approximately 1 cup of water or until just covered. 3. Bring to simmer and cover tightly. Put in oven for one hour. 4. Gently remove apples and reduce the liquid to syrup consistency. 5. Serve with the honey cake.

When Levine makes chicken soup for Rosh Hashanah, she makes it very much the way her mother did, but she adds fresh ginger. “That ginger really lends a wonderful aroma and taste to the soup, and it also has health benefits,” she says. Separate from the soup, Levine says she sometimes makes a roasted chicken with pomegranate sauce.

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“My mother would roast the chicken, but now I do something a little different, with pomegranate glaze or apricot glaze on roasted chicken,” she says. “Also in our kosher home, we ate meat and added a little sweetness to the meat; I continue to do that. “Now because people are so diet conscious, the trend is away from meat, so I try to bring more fish into the meals

1 apple grated, no need to peel 2½ cups all-purpose flour 2 tsp. baking soda ½ cup white sugar ½ cup packed dark brown sugar ½ tsp. salt ¼ tsp. ground cardamom ¼ tsp. ground ginger ¼ tsp. ground cloves ½ tsp. ground cinnamon 3 grinds of coarse ground black pepper (optional) zest and juice of 1 orange zest and juice of 1 lemon 1¼ cups very strong coffee - room temperature   cup dark honey 6 tablespoons canola oil 1 cup chopped walnuts (optional) 1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. 2. Line two loaf pans with parchment paper and spray with Pam. 3. Combine all ingredients in a stand mixer until well blended. This is a loose batter. 4. Bake for approximately 50 minutes in the center rack of your oven. Test with skewer in center of cake. Cake is done when skewer comes out clean and dry. Let cool on rack and remove from pan. 5. Serve with apple confit.

and things with more grain, like quinoa and farro – what chefs call ancient grains.” Levine says she also has made a vegetarian stuffed cabbage. “Instead of using traditional green cabbage, I’ll use savoy cabbage,” she says. “My mother introduced me to savoy cabbage; she used to put it in her soup. It’s much more tender (than

traditional green cabbage), and I love the flavor; it’s more distinct.” Levine says she incorporates some of these dishes into the meals she prepares at Bistro 185, but mostly she does this type of cooking at her Pepper Pike home. Thanks to the influence of her mother, the traditions live on – with her own unique spin. js

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FEATURE STORY

Small

wonders Story by Carlo Wolff Photography by Michael C. Butz

Environmentally conscious Tiny Houses may be the next big thing in housing, and two have sprouted in Cleveland’s Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood

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Above: Looking down from the loft bedroom, one can see the living room, dining room and kitchen in the Detroit Shoreway Community Development Organization’s Tiny House. Top right: From left, Adam Rosen, DSCDO economic development director, and Adam Davenport, DSCDO project manager, stand in the kitchen. Right: The Tiny House’s loft bedroom. Previous page: A look at DSCDO’s Tiny House from West 58th Street.

I

f there were only the one Tiny House, it would seem lonely, like a kid marooned in an adult party. But there are two, side by side, in EcoVillage on Cleveland’s near West Side, and together, they are poised to take organic part in an older, more lived-in locale. character. Not to mention “It feels good,” Adam functionality in shelving made Davenport, project manager from refinished hardware for the Detroit Shoreway store bins and stools that open Community Development for storage. Organization, says, standing At 583 square feet in the living room of one. each, these sturdy, new“It’s, like, a very wellconstruction homes, the city’s constructed house.” first permanent Tiny Houses, These Tiny Houses, one may be a clue to a new, owned by DSCDO, the other rapidly evolving direction, by Sutton Development suggest Davenport and Adam Group, seem downright Rosen, DSCDO’s economic neighborly. Outfitting them development director. with vintage furniture The houses are an repurposed by Reincarnation “experiment in living” Vintage Design, a firm in the Lorain Avenue antique district, jump-started by $140,000 from Citizens Bank in is not only functional, it adds

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collaboration with DSCDO, Sutton Development Group and Matt Zone, Ward 15 Cleveland councilman. They sell with a 15-year city tax abatement. Sutton Development built both tall, skinny houses and is asking $149,000 for its one. DSCDO hoped to sell the other for $119,000 when it went on the market Sept. 15. Building them required a variance from the city requiring a house be at least 950 square feet in size. They don’t feel small. They do raise questions and pique one’s curiosity.

What’s it like? Davenport has stayed in one of these Tiny Houses. He’s also been in even smaller ones, like a 130-square-foot one on Cleveland’s East Side that sits on a trailer. Rosen has been to a party in the Detroit-Shoreway house, a party of about 40. Everybody fit. “We had a staff happy hour here,” says Rosen. “We brought in Frank’s Falafel and we all kind of fraternized amongst each other and it was very comfortable to

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Feature Story have a party here after work. It was a lot of fun. “It’s been fun showing off. It’s brought a lot of notoriety to the neighborhood online, and people are just driving by, checking it out, curious.” DSCDO’s Tiny House has an Instagram account (@tinyhousecle), and a contingent from Snapchat took over the house during the Republican National Convention. Airbnb rented it out for $85 a night from June until Sept. 1. For a residence of its scale, the Tiny House packs a lot in: a 12-by-11-foot bedroom, a 9-by-10-foot back room, a 17-by-10-foot living room/ kitchen, a 12-by-13-foot loft bedroom, a full-sized bathroom, storage and state-of-the-art, full-sized appliances. There is shelving high up on several living room walls. You reach those shelves and the guestroom loft by climbing a ladder that moves around the room, clamping to a bar like library ladders do. It’s a different way of living and a different way of conceiving space. The orientation is more vertical than horizontal. As for installing bookshelves on the ground floor, that would be tight. “You have to get all your books on Kindle, I guess,” quips Rosen. At the same time, a Tiny House is economical and energy-efficient, with a low-flow toilet and showerhead, a tankless water heater and a wall-mounted heating, ventilating and air-conditioning unit. The foundation is insulated and the house is airsealed. Heating and cooling the house is expected to

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cost $500 a year. These are “green” houses, as befits a neighborhood called EcoVillage. Centered on the West 65th Street-Lorain Avenue Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority station, EcoVillage is defined as the area within a quartermile walk of that RTA stop. “I think this whole EcoVillage concept is a natural because of the Rapid station,” Davenport said, noting the neighborhood is ideal for housing development as people move west from the Tremont and Ohio City neighborhoods. He also cites its proximity to Gordon Square Arts District (also in the Detroit-Shoreway neighborhood), the Market District in Ohio City, Edgewater Park and Lake Erie. “I think it’s part of the story we like to tell, of the Detroit-Shoreway and also the Gordon Square Art District,” Rosen said. “We are constantly telling our story, developing our brand, and if we can incorporate the Tiny House into that and say, hey, look, we’ve got this sustainable living, you know, and minimalism, this new way to kind of do things, it will encourage further development by individuals.” These houses stand out, and not just for their colors. The one DSCDO is marketing, at the northwestern corner of West 58th Street and Pear Avenue, is a cocky chartreuse. The other is a more modest blue. Their tall, eccentric profiles – a crisply gabled roof, sides canted to different lengths, is their rakish “chapeau” – mark them as something

A movable ladder is used to reach both the loft bedroom, shown above, and storage units located above the bathroom entrance at DSCDO’s Tiny House.

different, something for the adventurous, something, largely, for the adult.

Living in a Tiny House “I think if you’re just one person, unless you have a ton of stuff, I think it’s very doable,” says Davenport, mulling over potential buyers for such a distinctive home. “You have enough space for just yourself.” How about a family? “I don’t know about that,” Davenport says. “That would be a preference at that point. You’re talking about a different mindset.”

“A couple would have to make some choices about how much stuff they have, but at the same time I think you’re making a healthy decision,” Rosen says. “You don’t have as much stuff, you don’t have as much clutter, you have less impact on the environment. You’re not going out and filling a house with all sorts of product that’s made in China or wherever else.” Owners of such homes are less encumbered, making the residences ideal for the traveler, the single person, young professionals and

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Feature Story

empty nesters. They’re also natural progressions from apartments downtown. And like the rest of the neighborhood, they attest to environmental sensitivity, a core principle of EcoVillage. Sustainability is in their DNA, and sustainability has a price.

Small house, small costs?

Clockwise from top left: The DSCDO Tiny House’s master bedroom, bathroom and back room, which uses decorative curtains to conceal a washer and dryer, left, as well as storage space.

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The U.S. Census Bureau says that the average size of an average single-family home built in 2015 was 2,467 square feet. Does construction of such a Tiny House cost less than construction costs of a conventional home? No, says Davenport. “That’s a big misnomer,” he says. “You see the shows on TV, like people building them themselves for 20 grand or 40 grand, and unless you are doing it for yourself, it’s not realistic. This house doesn’t move. It was built with labor. We paid people to do that. We’re not doing it ourselves. There are some fixed costs

with construction. And hooking it up to water and sewer costs the same as a conventional house. “The price of the house does not shrink with the size. It does not correlate.” But occupying such a house is simplifying. It forces one to consider one’s stuff. It forces a resident to consider what he or she needs – what’s essential and what’s superfluous. Granted, Davenport and Rosen are marketing a Tiny House, so they present it positively. But they’re also philosophical. “I think the downsizing of your living space has become more and more common,” says Davenport, “maybe not for families, but maybe they go a little smaller.” Families may not feel comfortable in a house of less than 600 square feet, “but I think for the younger couples, single people, the empty nester, this is becoming more popular.” js

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GET THE LOOK

Space savers By Kristen Mott

Multipurpose furniture is key when decorating a smaller space such as an apartment or a condo – or Tiny House. Opt for pieces like a bookshelf that also can be used as a room divider or an expandable table in order to best utilize space. Smaller loveseats and chairs can help make a space feel homey without taking up too much room.

MOD: Matter of Design

From left: Sepulveda reversible sectional by Four Studio and Monterey ottoman sleeper by Norwalk Furniture

Metro Home

From left: Tambour side table by EQ3, Zeal daybed by Innovations and Climb bookcase by EQ3

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GET THE LOOK

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Designers Furniture Michael sofa by Younger

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Room seRvice Schultz Upholstery

Second life living rooms The three R’s – refurbishing, repurposing and recycling – are among the hottest trends for furniture, as is reclaimed wood By Ed Wittenberg f you have pieces of furniture in your home that are old or outdated, you may want to consider having them remade before tossing them out. Repurposing or recycling furniture is the latest trend in living room decoration, says Luke Ciancibello, owner of Schultz Upholstery in Willoughby. “Sometimes people will have chairs they’ve had in their house or in storage or in

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a basement for a number of years,” Ciancibello says. “We try to educate customers about repurposing those pieces versus buying something new, as they can often be repurposed at less cost than purchasing new items. It’s a trend that’s starting to increase in popularity.” A quality piece of furniture in storage or a basement can often be turned into a showpiece, Ciancibello says. “When somebody comes in with good quality pieces

of furniture that are old, we describe how we can clean up the woodwork, change the padding and filling and help them select a fabric that’s right for them,” he says, adding that another trend for furniture is coordinating fabrics. “Rather than using one style or color of fabric over an entire piece, a customer can choose two or three different fabrics from that piece to give it a unique look,” he says. “It’s something we offer to

customers that they may not realize is an option. “In our workshop we have a showroom of fabrics, so customers can come in and see the work being done and select a fabric.” A home pickup of furniture can be scheduled if necessary, Ciancibello says. Judy Schumann, furniture artist at The Refinishing Center in Chagrin Falls, agrees that repurposing furniture is a hot trend.

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SERVICE | RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL Cleveland Jewish News S Applause shades are the choice for children. Plus, they offer FREE SHOP-AT-HOME 8-5 Seals Seals Seals With a variety of cordless operating systems to choose from, ® 23880 beautiful fabrics and affordable prices, making every room in 216-342-5193 Applause honeycomb shades with enhanced child safety. 23880 Commerce Park Ste 1 Comm With a variety of cordless operating systems to choose from, 216-342-5193 AApplause SAFER ROOM FOR PLAY. the choice for children. Plus, they offer Applause® shades are ®ROOM 2 3 Beach 1 A SAFER FOR PLAY. your home even more enjoyable. shades are the choice for children. Plus, they offer Applause honeycomb shades with enhanced child safety. Beachwood OH Choose Choose Choose Everything for the Window Choose Applause honeycomb shades with enhanced child safety. beautiful fabrics and affordable prices, making every room in Applause honeycomb shades with enhanced child safety. Cleveland beautiful fabrics andWith affordable prices, making every room in 8 8-5 Seals Seals Seals Seals a variety cordless systems to choosePLAY. from, youroperating home even more enjoyable. A ofSAFER ROOM FOR Follow UsChoose At Facebook or Tw Social Media Name Choose Choose Choose Everything for the Window 23880 Com 216-3 your home even more enjoyable. the for children. Plus, theyFOR Applause shades are 2 Seals 3 SealsCho 4 1 safety. With a variety of®of cordless operating systems to choose from, Choose 216-342-5193 Seals Seals With a choice variety cordless operating systems tooffer choose from, A SAFER ROOM Choose Choose Applause honeycomb shades withPLAY. enhanced child A beautiful SAFER ROOM FOR PLAY. Beac FREE SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE | RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL4 With ashades variety of cordless operating systems to choose from, are the choice for children. Plus, they offer offer fabrics andApplause affordable prices, making every room in shades are the choice for children. they Applause 2 3 1 Applause honeycomb shades with enhanced childSocial safety. Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter Media Name Seals Seals Sea Seals beautiful fabrics and affordable prices, making every room in beautiful fabrics affordable prices, making room in ® and Applause honeycomb shades with enhanced child safety. Everything for the Window your home even more enjoyable. shades are the choice for children. Follow Us At Facebook or Twitter Plus, they offer Applause Social Media Name Choose Choose Choose Choose Everything for the Window your home evenmore more enjoyable. your home even enjoyable. With a varietyWith of acordless operating systems to choose from, Choose Choose Choose Choose Choose Choose Choose216Choose 2 3 1 variety ofprices, cordless operating systems to choose from, in beautiful fabrics and affordable making every room Seals Seals Seals 4 Seals Seals Seals Seals Seals SealsSeals Seals Seals With a variety cordless operating systems toare choose from, shades the choice for children. Plus, they offer Applause A ofSAFER ROOM FOR PLAY. shades are the choice for children. Plus, they offer Applause FREE SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE |2RESIDENTIAL 11every 22Facebook 3 AND4COMMERCIAL 1making are the choice for children. Plus, they offer Applause 4 4 Twit beautiful fabrics and affordable prices, every room room inin 3 3 your shades home even more enjoyable. beautiful fabrics and affordable prices, making Applause honeycomb shades with enhanced child safety. Follow Us At or Social Media Name

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FREE SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE | RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL FREE SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE | RESIDENTIAL AND beautiful andthe affordable prices, making every room your home even moreinenjoyable. © 2014 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used fabrics herein are property of Hunter Douglas. Follow Us At Facebook or COMMERCIAL Twitter Social Media Name Choos Choose Follow UsAt At Facebook or your even more enjoyable. Social Media Name © 2014 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved.home All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. Follow Us Facebook orTwitter Twitter Everything for the Window your home even more enjoyable. © 2014 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. Choose Choose Choose Choose Seals5 Seals 54636 With a variety of cordless operating systems to choose from, SealsPlus,Seals 2 1 they offer Seals Seals Applause® shades are the choice for children. 2 in 3 4 Social 1 every room FONTS: beautiful fabrics and affordable prices, making Follow Us At M F EARL AGIN - SARPANCH FREE SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE | RESIDENTIAL AND COMMERCIAL EVERYTHING FOR THE WINDOW - DIN CONDENSED BOLD designers of Name home even more enjoyable. © 2014 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarksyour usedFREE herein are the Hunter Douglas. FollowSocial Us At Media Facebook or Twitter Choo SHOP AT property HOME... of - DIN SEMIBOLD FONTS: FONTS:

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designers of EARL R. AGIN designers for over 55 yearsof 2 1 546 treatments &window ASSOCIATES, INC. FollowSocial Us At window treatments SHARONdesigners AGIN ROSENBERG of for over 55 years office 216.464.9017 54636

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CMYK FONTS: © 2014 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas.

C=85 M=50 Y=0 K=0 PowerView Motorization ™ CMYK PowerView Motorization EVERYTHING FOR THE WINDOW - DIN CONDENSED BOLD © 2014 Hunter Douglas.C=85 All rights M=50 reserved. Y=0 All trademarks herein are the Hunter Douglas. SHOP AT property HOME... of - DIN SEMIBOLD K=0 usedFREE ™ EARL AGIN - SARPANCH

forwindow overoftreatments 55 years Beautiful shades, © 2014 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are mobile the property216.857.0094 Hunter Douglas. Beautiful shades, PowerView Motorization for over 55 years SHARON AGIN ROSENBERG PowerView Motorization moving toto your schedule. Pirouette Window Shadings email sharon@earlagin.com moving your schedule. © 2014 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. Hunter Douglas window fashions with PowerView™ Motorization, office 216.464.9017 Motorization webAGIN www.earlagin.com SHARON AGIN ROSENBERG the intelligent shadesPowerView that movefashions automatically a schedule you set. *SHARON ROSENBERG Hunter Douglas window withtoPowerView™ Motorization, PowerView Motorization the intelligent shades that move automatically to a schedule you set.* Beautiful shades, office 216.857.0094 216.464.9017 mobile rebates on qualifying purchases of Hunter Douglas Beautiful shades, $150** with Save window PowerViewpurchases Motorization, 7/2 – 9/12/16. office 216.464.9017 rebateswith on qualifying of Hunter Douglas ** withfashions Beautiful shades, mobile 216.857.0094 $ moving to your schedule. Beautiful shades, sharon@earlagin.com Save 150 window fashions with PowerView Motorization, 7/2 – email 9/12/16. moving to your schedule. moving to your schedule. email sharon@earlagin.com Order your shades now and be ready for holiday gatherings. Hunter Douglas window fashions with PowerView™ Motorization, moving to schedule. 216.857.0094 *The PowerView App and additional equipment required for your programmed operation. **Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifyingmobile purchases made 7/2/16–9/12/16 from participating dealers in the www.earlagin.com Hunter Douglas window fashions with Motorization, the intelligent that move automatically to a schedule set. * to receive Hunter Douglas window fashions with Motorization, U.S.shades only. For certain rebate-eligible products, the purchase of PowerView™ multiple unitsPowerView™ of suchyou product is required fewer units than the required multiple you will not be entitled to Plus, save $100 with rebates on select purchases of a rebate. If you purchaseweb web www.earlagin.com ™

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© 2014 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas. PowerView™ Motorization ™

PowerView Motorization

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*The PowerView App and additional equipment required for programmed operation. **Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 7/2/16–9/12/16 from participating dealers in the U.S. only. For certain rebate-eligible products, the purchase of multiple units of such product is required to receive a rebate. If you purchase fewer units than the required multiple you will not be entitled to a rebate; partial rebates will not be awarded. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law, a $2.00 monthly fee will be assessed against card balance 6 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. the intelligent that move automatically to aprepaid schedule set. * owners. Hunter window fashions with Motorization, © 2016 Hunter Douglas. Allwill rights reserved. All trademarks usedbeherein areinthe ofaPowerView™ Hunter Douglas theirand respective a rebate; partial rebates notDouglas be shades awarded. Rebate will issued theproperty form of rewardoryou card mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable law,

email sharon@earlagin.com web www.earlagin.com

the intelligent shades that move automatically to a schedule you set. * Hunter Douglas window 12/12/16. * * limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. a $2.00 monthly feethe will intelligent be assessed against card balance 6fashions, monthsautomatically after cardnow issuancethrough and month thereafter. Additional shades that move to aeach schedule you set. rebates qualifying of purchases Hunter Douglas ** with © 2016 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved.on All ** trademarks usedpurchases herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners. with rebates on qualifying of Hunter Douglas window with PowerView Motorization, 7/2 – 9/12/16. window fashions PowerViewpurchases 7/2 – 9/12/16. Douglas window fashions with PowerView™ Motorization, rebateswith on qualifying of Hunter Douglas on qualifying purchases ofMotorization, Hunter Douglas ** with ** withfashions $rebates $and window fashions withmail-in PowerView 7/2 – 9/12/16. *Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer validadditional for qualifying purchases made 9/17/16–12/12/16 from participating dealers in theMotorization, U.S.foronly. For certain rebate-eligible products,from theparticipating purchase of multiple units of window fashions with PowerView Motorization, 7/2 – 9/12/16. * The PowerView App equipment required for programmed operation. **Manufacturer’s rebate offer valid qualifying purchases made 7/2/16–9/12/16 dealers in the lligent shades that move automatically to a schedule you set. * er*The Douglas window fashions with PowerView™ Motorization, PowerView App and additional equipment required for programmed operation. **Manufacturer’s mail-in rebate offer valid for qualifying purchases made 7/2/16–9/12/16 from participating dealers in the

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U.S. only. For certainNantucket rebate-eligible products, thearebates purchase of multiple units of such is receive a rebate. Ifmailed purchase fewer units thanreceipt. the required willreceipt. be entitled todealers in the ™ Window ® Rebate *aThe PowerView App and equipment required for programmed operation. **Manufacturer’s rebate valid for qualifying purchases made from participating Shadings, collection of Silhouette Window Shadings. will issued in the formandofmail-in ayou prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of7/2/16–9/12/16 rebateyou claim Funds do not rebate; partial willadditional not be awarded. will beproduct issued inRebate therequired form of abeto prepaid reward card within 6offer weeks of rebate claim Funds domultiple not expire. Subject tonot applicable law, *aThe PowerView App and additional equipment for programmed operation. mail-in rebate valid for qualifying purchases made 7/2/16–9/12/16 participating dealers rebate; partial rebates will not be Rebate will be issued inwill thecard of a6prepaid reward cardof6and mailed within 6offer weeks of rebate claim receipt. do not expire. Subject tofrom applicable U.S. only. For certain rebate-eligible products, the purchase of**Manufacturer’s multiple units such product iscard required to receive a rebate. If you purchase fewer units than the for required multiple you willlaw, not be entitled to in the $2.00 monthly feearequired will be monthly assessed against balance months after issuance and eachafter month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Funds Ask participating dealer details and rebate form. expire. Subject toaawarded. applicable law, $2.00 fee beform assessed against cardcard balance months issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating © 2016 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners. a rebate; partial rebates will not be awarded. Rebate will be issued in the form of a prepaid reward card and mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds do not expire. Subject to applicable only. For School certain products, the purchase of multiple units of such product is required to receive a rebate. If you purchase fewer units than the required multiple you will not be law, entitled to with rebates on qualifying purchases of Hunter Douglas aU.S. $2.00 monthly feedealer willrebate-eligible beforassessed against card balance 6 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for details and rebate form. details and rebate form. © 2016 Hunter Douglas. All rights reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners. ad 2016:Layout 1 9/14/16 3:14 PM Page 1 abe $2.00 monthly fee will bewill assessed against card balance 6of months after reward card issuance each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. AskFunds participating dealer for details and rebate form. © 2016 Hunter Douglas. Allwill rights All trademarks used areinthe or7/2 theirand respective owners. a rebate; partial rebates notreserved. awarded. Rebate beherein issued theproperty formMotorization, of aHunter Douglas prepaid card mailed within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. do not expire. Subject to applicable law, window fashions with PowerView –and 9/12/16.

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roducts, the purchase of multiple units of such product is required to receive a rebate. If you purchase fewer units than the required multiple you will not be entitled to equipment required programmed **Manufacturer’s valid for qualifying purchases participating warded. Rebate will befor issued in the formoperation. of a prepaid reward card andmail-in mailed rebate within 6offer weeks of rebate claim receipt. Fundsmade do not7/2/16–9/12/16 expire. Subject tofrom applicable law, dealers in the e products, the purchase of multiple of such is required to receive a rebate. If you than thegrade required youform. will not be entitled to against card balance 6 months after cardunits issuance andproduct each month thereafter. Additional limitations maypurchase apply. Askfewer participating for details and rebate Aunits Pre-K –dealer 8th AMI multiple Montessori All trademarks usedbeherein areinthe theirand respective eerved. awarded. Rebate will issued theproperty form ofofaHunter Douglas prepaid rewardorcard mailedowners. within 6 weeks of rebate claim receipt. Funds expire. Subject to applicable law, program with overdo 20not years of proven

sed against card balance 6 months after card issuance and each month thereafter. Additional limitations may apply. Ask participating dealer for serves details and rebate form. excellence, Cleveland Montessori all aspects of a child’s development — reserved. All trademarks used herein are the property of Hunter Douglas or their respective owners. social, emotional,cognitive and spiritual.

We invite you to get to know us better and to see if we are a fit for your family. Call to arrange a personal tour or join us at an upcoming open house.

Join us for an open house! Saturday, November 5th - 2:00- 4:00 p.m.

clevelandmontessori.org 12510 Mayfield Road • Cleveland p (216) 421.0700 • f (216) 421.2310

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Fall 2016

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DÉCOR

Room seRvice

Eastwood Furniture Above: A rustic console from Eastwood Furniture. Right: Judy Schumann, a furniture artist at The Refinishing Center, uses a sander to distress the edges and brass hardware on a three-piece buffet, which was originally black but then painted gray. Previous page: A dining room set from Schultz Upholstery.

“Newly painted looks are really getting big,” she says. “The trend is definitely to recycle the furniture so there is less waste.” Schumann says many younger people have been redoing their parents’ furniture or recycling items they purchased at garage sales. “I see the trend staying for a long time because there is so much furniture out there that can be fixed, painted and redone to look fun, colorful and very stylish,” she says. “Just changing an end table to a dark matte finish or a chair to a Pure Red high-gloss, or my favorite, a metallic finish, can change the whole feel in a living room without spending a lot of money. Redoing furniture is a style that is established and here to stay.” Putting chalk paint and faux finishes on pieces can bring them to life, Schumann says.

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“We have done a lot of distressed grays, whites and neutralizing to transform many secondhand pieces, but lately we’re seeing the trend to paint with exciting metallics with gold and silver details, blues with a punch, bright reds, oranges and yellows that pop – and create interest and contrast in any room,” she says. The Refinishing Center can take old pieces that are family heirlooms and refurbish them to look like they did when previous generations owned them, Schumann says. “For example, a man brought in an old tea cart,” she says. “It was his grandmother’s wedding gift from the early 1900s, and he wanted it restored to the way it was when it was originally gifted to her. (Owner) Benjamin (Malovany) repaired the broken pieces, put new wheels on it and stripped off the old finish.

The Refinishing Center

We then repainted it in a way that made it look aged, and it turned out amazing. The customer couldn’t have been happier. “The Refinishing Center not only takes antiques and brings them back to life, but we can repair and restore all furniture. There are not many people in the Chagrin Valley who have the skill and expertise Benjamin has. He’s been in the business for more than 30 years.” Ron Nandor, owner of Kidron-based Eastwood Furniture, believes living rooms are becoming more informal, but still need to be functional. One trend he sees are that TV sets are smaller and sleeker than they used to be and are being mounted on walls, which gives a living room a different look. “The equipment that goes in the console is also getting smaller,” he says.

Eastwood Furniture, which also has stores in Cleveland Heights and Medina, focuses on wood furniture, entertainment centers and tables. It offers a rustic entertainment center – an example of a console that can add a rustic but refined look to a living room, Nandor says. “This (center) has a reclaimed wood top and doors and a gray stain that is not very traditional and can work in a number of different rooms and styles,” he says. “We also have a rustic coffee table, a hickory burl slab table that is one of a kind.” The rustic items are made from burnt wood and give a more informal look to a living room, Nandor says. “We customize the furniture for specific rooms,” he says. “All the furniture is made here in Ohio by fine craftsmen; it’s all handcrafted and solid-made.” js

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REFRESH & RENEW: A SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION FOR COSMETIC AND PLASTIC SURGERY

Refresh &

RENEW Imagine the possible and discover a new you.

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Fall 2016

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

Dr. Mark A. Foglietti/ Cosmetic Surgery Institute 216-292-6800 • allnewyou.com

W

hen people consider looking younger through cosmetic surgery, a facelift is what usually comes to mind. So, is a facelift the panacea to recapturing a youthful Dr. Mark A. appearance? Perhaps. Foglietti Restorative success is a matter of finding a plastic surgeon who can determine the procedure that would most benefit a patient and whose technique would make a patient look like a younger version of himself or herself, not like an entirely different person. Choosing a good plastic surgeon for facial procedures is extremely important and requires a bit of detective work. The main consideration is the experience of the surgeon doing the procedure. Excellent facial rejuvenation surgeries are a result of the technique a surgeon utilizes and his or her fluency in executing it. As a general rule, a surgeon’s expertise in these surgeries isn’t refined until he or she has many years in practice and become proficient in performing them. A talented surgeon will then build a strong referral base as satisfied patients discuss their experience and share their results with friends, family and often their primary care doctors. During a consultation, an experienced surgeon will be able to determine what the appropriate surgery for a person would be and explain why. The complete transformation of a patient to a

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Patient was forming sagging gowls which were recontoured with a face lift procedure.

younger-looking self isn’t always achieved by a facelift alone. Other procedures, such as a neck lift, upper or lower eyelid surgery, or a brow lift in combination with a facelift, may be necessary to complete the desired outcome. Patients could even find out that they would benefit more from another facial surgery than a facelift. Everyone ages differently, and an expert surgeon can determine the right course of action. Don’t hesitate to ask the surgeon how many facelifts or other facial surgeries the physician has performed in his practice and ask to see their before-and-after photos. A surgeon, who has plenty of experience, should have photos of his or her work available. For the patient, it is imperative that the correct facial rejuvenation surgery is done and done skillfully; the face is the one place where it will show if surgery is done improperly. You owe it to yourself to find the best surgeon possible.

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A Premier

Cosmetic Surgery Practice FACE/NECK LIFT • BROW LIFT • BREAST LIFT/ENLARGEMENT • BREAST REDUCTION OR RECONSTRUCTION • LIPOSUCTION (TUMESCENT, ULTRASONIC) • TUMMY TUCKS • NASAL SURGERY • LASER SURGERY • SKIN-CARE PROGRAM • BOTOX COSMETIC JUVEDERM XC

Mark A. Foglietti, D.O., FACOS Director and Founder: Cosmetic Surgery Institute Board Certified: Plastic, Reconstructive and General Surgery

COSMETIC SURGERY INSTITUTE 22901 MILLCREEK BLVD., SUITE 145 BEACHWOOD, OH • (216) 292-6800 www.allnewyou.com

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THE EXPERIENCE YOU TRUST AND THE SKILL YOU DESERVE. Fall 2016 Jstyle 79


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

The Art of Plastic Surgery 216-464-1616 • drfedele.com

Time to focus on Mom

Y

ou’re an awesome mom, and a healthy one. Because women are taking better care of themselves today with regular exercise, yoga classes, healthy diets and basic clean living, you feel Gregory M. younger than your age! For today’s Fedele, MD, mom’s fast-paced world, diet and FACS exercise can be essential to help you MD, FACS stay 216-464-1616 in shape and feel younger. But it’s never easy. fedele.com Weight loss, lack of exercise, aging, or especially the aftermath of pregnancy can leave your breasts and body sagging, protruding and out of shape. Excess skin and stretched muscles will not go away with aerobic workouts and exercise equipment. Many moms still have these “trouble” areas on their body and that “ideal shape” seems like an unreachable goal! It’s time to hit the reset button for the active mom! Restart, reinvigorate and restore the beauty from those pre-child birth years. Get back those areas that have been changed from pregnancy, weight-loss, aging and running your family. Moms who want a slimmer figure, flatter stomach, more lifted and fuller breasts, and a better-proportioned body may be looking for that “transformation” in the form of breast enhancement and body contouring. If your stomach is not as flat as you want it despite regular exercise, or if weight loss or pregnancy have stretched your skin out of shape, an abdominoplasty may be just what you need. Excess skin is removed and loose abdominal muscles are tightened giving you a flatter, smoother appearing stomach. Dr. Fedele performs an abdominoplasty to remove excess fatty tissue and skin in the lower abdomen, giving you a shapelier midriff while tightening the waist, “repairing” the damage done by pregnancy or

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Before

After

excessive weight loss. Your procedure will be tailored to your individual needs. For those with little excess skin, a “mini-tuck” may be sufficient. For those with a lot of excess skin, a “full-tuck” may be required. In both situations, incisions are strategically placed to be as low as possible below the underwear line. Breast enlargement or augmentation can enhance and contour your breasts, giving you a shapelier figure and making you more confident in your appearance. Many women experience a decrease in their breast size and shape after pregnancy or with age. Dr. Fedele performs breast augmentation using saline or silicone implants to increase your cup size while providing a fuller shape to the breast. If you have sagging breasts or “breast ptosis” from pregnancy, age or gravity, a breast lift or “mastopexy” can lift your breasts into a more youthful position. If sagging breasts and loss of breast volume is your problem, a mastopexy with an augmentation using an implant can give you larger, firmer and younger looking breasts. To achieve a more complete transformation, these procedures can be combined to give you a more dramatic improvement to your shape and contour, giving you the look you desire in everyday clothes, dresses or even bathing suits. Moms, whether you are still tucking a toddler in bed, running adolescents to their sports or dealing with those challenging teenagers, it may be time to focus on you. Let us help you achieve your transformation goals!

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Put the Mmmm... Back in Mom!

jstylemagazine.com *Actual patient of Dr. Fedele, and busy mother of two!

Gregory M. Fedele, MD, FACS 216-464-1616 Fall 2016 Jstyle 81 drfedele.com


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

Zeeba Clinic 440-646-2173 • drbahmanguyuron.com

Defying aging without surgery

A

disciplined regime of skin care and lasers will stop and even reverse facial

the production of new elastic bands and reverse discoloration. Some laser treatments are deep and require aging a longer recovery time. Typically, only one Established signs of aging treatment is needed every 10 to 15 years or even such as wrinkles, jowls and skin in a lifetime. Superficial laser treatments, being Bahman discoloration can be reversed less invasive, require minimal recovery, but must Guyuron, MD with surgery and laser treatments. be repeated several times to deliver the intended These conditions can also be prevented, and results. Both treatments effectively restore the surgery can be avoided with an early start in skin natural glow that is inherent in younger skin. care and laser treatments. Facial droopiness and lost volume in the Modern technology and advanced knowledge skin can be replenished in two ways. The most of aging have provided us with the ability to effective and longest lasting method is a facelift, halt facial aging for patients without surgery. along with injecting a patient’s own fat into For more than 30 years, Zeeba Clinic has helped areas where the most volume has diminished. many patients maintain a youthful appearance This injection carries the added benefit of well into their 70s and 80s through dedicated transferring imbedded stem cells within the fat, skin care and laser treatments with or without which restores volume, increases elasticity and surgery. But that success is only attainable re-establishes the natural radiance to the skin. for those who are disciplined to commit to a Recovery time varies among patients. prevention regime. Lost volume can also be restored with offSome passage of time reduces skin elasticity the-shelf fillers and come with minimal recovery and causes wrinkles. The skin becomes time, if any. It is important to know that off-thediscolored, the face loses volume and it starts shelf fillers can cause subtle lumpiness and might to droop. Improved elasticity and a youthful require additional injections annually, depending skin color can be achieved with clinically tested on the area of the face. The results may last six skin products. For many individuals starting in months to a few years, depending on the product. their 30s, these products are a proven way to It is critical that facial treatments are avert aging changes, but only if they are used conducted under the supervision of a boardfaithfully. certified plastic surgeon. Many inadequately Laser treatments provide an additional effect trained providers have entered the cosmetics field by repairing the damaged collagen fibers in the who are not qualified enough to deliver safe and skin. The lasers can also direct different levels successful results. of heat to specific layers of the skin to promote

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jstylemagazine.com


TURN BACK THE HANDS OF TIME WITH OR WITHOUT SURGERY AND REFLECT THE BEAUTY WITHIN

ZEEBA CLINIC

Reverse signs of aging with laser treatments and a physician-grade skin care regime to compliment, delay or avoid surgical procedures All procedures are performed under the supervision of Dr. Bahman Guyuron, one of the world’s top plastic surgeons based in Northeast Ohio - Lasers

- Fillers

- Dermablading

- Eyebrow tinting

- 3 Step chemical Peel

- Makeup lessons - Stimulation chemical peel

- Camouflage makeup

- Customizable skincare regime

SURGICAL PROCEDURES

Rhinoplasty Eye Lift Brow Lift Neck Lift Chin Surgery Face Lift Facial Reconstruction Asian Blepharoplasty Male Facial Plastic Surgery Facial Implants Fat Transfer/Injection Migraine Relief

440.461.7999 drbahmanguyuron.com 29017 Cedar Rd. Cleveland, OH 44124-4073


SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

Lose Body Fat without Surgery 216-264-7800 • drhusni.com “For 50 Years, the Holy Grail of Plastic Surgery has been nonsurgical fat removal,” says Nicholas Husni, MD, PhD, and a Board Nicholas Husni, Certified Plastic Surgeon. MD, PhD “The Grail has been found and it is called CoolSculpting. Finally, there is a procedure that removes fat without using needles, scalpels or suction cannulas, and the down time following the procedure is truly zero. The procedure was developed for the abdomen and love-handles, but now we are treating bra-fat, hips, chin – virtually any body part!” What is CoolSculpting®? The procedure is based on a process called Cryolipolysis, which was developed by two Harvard scientists who published their research in November 2008. The technique is a non-invasive way to selectively reduce fat without harming surrounding tissue. It is based on the finding that fat cells below the skin are naturally harmed by cold more than other nearby tissue. Studies at Harvard showed that by exposing fat tissue to controlled cooling over a specific time period, the fat cells gradually are reduced and die. This differs from other non-invasive or minimally invasive technologies that use heat, high-intensity focused ultrasound or chemical injections to damage fat cells and cause them to die. While results of these latter techniques can cause unintended tissue damage, CoolSculpting®

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leads to the death of only fat cells. This cell death occurs gently and gradually. The cells are removed naturally over the following weeks or months by the patient’s immune system. If you are considering CoolSculpting®, it is safest for you to be seen by a board-certified plastic surgeon who is extensively trained in all methods of fat removal. Some patients will get better results, and often for less money, by having surgeries such as liposuction or a tummy tuck. If you go to a spa or an internist, they cannot offer you these options. CoolSculpting® is an attractive alternative because: • No needles, surgery or prolonged recovery time are needed. Because the technique is noninvasive, Dr. Husni’s patients can return to normal daily activities such as working or exercise as soon as the procedure is finished. • It doesn’t hurt. During the procedure, which the doctor performs in a medical office, patients may read, nap or sit comfortably. • Results are impressive. Patients on average experience about a 23 percent reduction of fat in the treated areas, and treated areas can be retreated to get further reduction.

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Face, Eyelid, and Nose Refinement Face, Eyelid, and Nose Refinement Augmentation, Reduction,

and Lift Reduction, Procedures Augmentation, Procedures Liposuction and and Lift Laser Lipolysis LiposuctionZeltiq and Laser Cool Lipolysis Sculpting Zeltiq Cool Sculpting

Body Contouring

Body Contouring

Botox and Dysport

Botox and Dysport

Restylane, Sculptra,

Restylane, Sculptra, Juvederm, and Radiesse Juvederm, and Radiesse

Medical Skin Care

Medical Skin Care

PermanentMakeup Makeup Permanent Laserand andPhoto Photo Rejuvenation Laser Rejuvenation

NicholasHusni, Husni,MD, MD, PhD Nicholas PhD BoardCertified CertifiedPlastic PlasticSurgeon Surgeon Board Crown Center Center Crown 5005 Rockside Rockside Road, 5005 Road, Suite Suite1225 1225 Independence, Ohio Independence, Ohio 44131 44131

P:P:216-264-7800 • F: 216-264-7800 • 216-592-8062 F: 216-592-8062 Nicholas@drhusni.com Nicholas@drhusni.com www.drhusni.com www.drhusni.com

East Side Side Office Office Opening East Openingthis thisFall Fall 29001 Cedar Cedar Rd., Rd., Suite 29001 Suite 300 300 Lyndhurst, OH 44124 Lyndhurst, OH 44124 jstylemagazine.com

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

Beachwood Dental 216-831-5661 • BeachwoodDental.com

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any people postpone dental visits simply because they feel they won’t have any control over their treatment plan. It doesn’t have to be that way. Learn how to regain Dr. Paul Mikhli control of your dental visit, ask the right questions, become an informed consumer, and feel comfortable to say yes or no to proposed treatment. Do I need this treatment? Doing nothing is always a treatment option. You should ask your dentist for a few treatment options and the potential outcomes of each. The dentist should provide you with all of the information to make an informed choice. How much will this cost? Dentists are trained to be doctors, not financial consultants. Their priority is to give you the best possible outcome for your dental problem. Find out when payment is due and ask about payment plans for larger treatment plans. What experience do you have? Ask the dentist what other cases similar to this they have done. Request to see before-and-after pictures of those cases. Proper experience and education is a necessity to receive a long-lasting and esthetic outcome that you expect.

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Before

After

Will this hurt? You should know what methods the office uses to increase patient comfort. In addition, you should ask what type of recovery is to be expected from the procedure and what can be done to make the recovery as comfortable as possible. How long will this take? How many appointments will be needed to complete treatment and how long will each appointment be? You can request that some procedures are split or combined to control the amount of time you spend in the office. How long will this dental work last? This is a question that doesn’t have a concrete answer but it should be asked. Proper initial treatment planning from the dentist should inform you of the best ways to maintain your oral health and dental investment. At Beachwood Dental, you are in complete control of your dental visit. It doesn’t need to be a stressful situation. We want to make you feel as comfortable as possible, both physically and emotionally. We’re happy to answer any questions you may have and become your partner in maintaining the optimum oral health you deserve!

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SPECIAL ADVERTISING SECTION

Beachwood | Westlake Plastic Surgery & Medical Spa 216-514-8899 (Beachwood) • 440-871-8899 (Westlake) • drgoldman.com

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urgeries such as rhinoplasty, breast augmentation, facelift and tummy tuck are the gold standard for definitive treatment of esthetic concerns of the face and body. However, surgery may Dr. Steven not always be the best option for a Goldman specific concern. Plastic surgeons and their patients have an increasing number of nonsurgical or minimally invasive options. Injectables are the most widely used nonsurgical esthetic treatments. BotoxTM, DysportTM and XeominTM are the three FDA-approved brands of botulinum toxin, which is injected directly into facial muscles to relax them, minimizing wrinkles. RestylaneTM, JuvedermTM, RadiesseTM and other injectable fillers are used to add volume to creases, folds and wrinkles, making them softer and less noticeable. Perhaps the most popular noninvasive treatment is CoolsculptingTM, which reduces fat beneath the skin by drastically cooling the skin to traumatize it with cold energy. Coolsculpting requires no anesthesia and has minimal downtime. UltheraTM tightens skin using focused sound energy. Venus LegacyTM tightens skin with radio waves. Two dramatic and popular new minimally invasive technologies are CellfinaTM and MiradryTM. Cellfina reduces cellulite by breaking the connective tissue bands under the skin. It is

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Before

After

performed awake with numbing medicine. It is the most effective technology available to treat cellulite. Miradry eliminates sweat glands in the underarm area for patients who sweat excessively or for patients with normal sweat production who don’t want to use deodorant any more. Patients find the lifestyle change from Miradry dramatic. KybellaTM is a completely new kind of injectable. It is FDA-approved to reduce submental fat, fullness in the neck under the chin. We have three options to treat this area: Kybella (an injectable), Coolsculpting (a noninvasive treatment) and liposuction (a minimally invasive treatment). This choice is a great example of the options available to our patients today. The best choice for each patient is determined with a thorough consultation with a qualified, board-certified plastic surgeon familiar with all of these options. This is an exciting time for surgeons and their patients, who have an increasingly broad array of options to treat esthetic concerns safely and effectively.

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CLOSERS

FASHION FOCUS

Eyewear

Eyewear at The Hamptons

Clockwise from top: Children’s flexible, hypoallergenic frames by Miraflex; men’s multi-layered colored acetate frame by eclectico; ladies’ Italian camouflage acetate frame by Fendi; and ladies’ Italian frame by Dada

Eyetique

Clockwise from left: Vintage 11 frame, Aiken frame, Banksville frame and Ellsworth frame, all by Norman Childs Eyewear from Eyetique stores at Eton and in Stow

Les Lunettes Optique

Men’s frames in black by Tom Ford

Fine Jewelry

Fall Fashion

Gino’s Jewelers Custom Halo Stud Earrings by Hearts On Fire

Govberg Jewelers

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Clockwise from top left: Annual Calendar Watch 5396G by Patek Philippe; Type 3B titanium watch by Ressence; Transocean Chronograph Unitime by Breitling; and SS America’s Cup watch by Bremont

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Lisa Moran Mimi’s Muses

Sweater, jacket and pants by Isabel de Pedro

Colorful scarves

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Fall Fashion Audrey’s Sweet Threads Faux fur trim sweater vest

Bonnie’s Goubaud

From left: Sheath dress with Greek key design by Joseph Ribkoff and colorfully trimmed black-andwhite fringed cape

Ticknors Men’s Clothier Cashmere blend sweater jacket by Raffi

Clothes Mentor Fringe Boutique

Knee-high zippered gray suede boots

Cashmere Romantic Ruffle Ruana by Minnie Rose

Kilgore Trout Plaid wool coat by L’Agence

Lucio Vanni Bridal & Couture From left: Silk and wool short cocktail dress and custom cashmere and wool military coat

Knuth’s Beautiful baubles by Kendra Scott

Revolve Fashion Gold beaded and jeweled velveteen evening dress

Toni in Style

From left: European Knits by Angel and black-and-tan fringed cape

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CLOSERS

PURSUITS

Finding

yourself

Among the local artwork at Hilton Cleveland Downtown is a mosaic depiction of the Cleveland skyline comprised of 2,800 selfies submitted earlier this year using the hashtag #MyCLEphoto. In the photos, area residents depicted their favorite spots in the region, thus showcasing Northeast Ohio for all of the hotel’s visitors.

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The superlative-charged chronograph. 50 mm case in BreitlightÂŽ. Exclusive Manufacture Breitling Caliber B12 with 24-hour military-style display. Officially chronometer-certified.

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RENOVATION is the perfect opportunity to get your dream Lexus.

Open During Construction 2016 RX 350

“The 2016 Lexus RX isn’t just the best-selling model in the Lexus lineup, it’s the best-selling luxury SUV in America” -Kelly Blue Book

2016 ES 350

” For consumers seeking the utmost in refinement and relaxation in an entry-level luxury car, the Lexus ES 350 is certain to have plenty of appeal.” - Edmunds.com

2016 NX 200

“With the best combination of positive reviews and longterm ownership costs in its class, the Lexus NX is our 2016 Best Luxury Compact SUV for the Money.” - U.S. News

CLASSIC Meet our team!

2551 SOM CENTER RD. IN WILLOUGHBY HILLS 440.975.1222 | CLASSICLEXUS.COM Complimentary Valet and Loaner Program and Complimentary Car Washes for All Classic Lexus Customers.


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