Aggregate Death

The Portrait Urn

A familiar face Portret urn by Nadia Gonegaï

At first sight, the Portrait urn is an everyday urn with a strong relief. But when you look a little closer, literally into the shadow of the vase, you can discern the silhouette of a face. The familiar face of the dearly departed. The Portrait urn is round, and displays from top to bottom a person’s facial profile, from crown, via nose, to neck.

The Portrait urn is an innovative design by artist Nadia Gonegaï from ‘s-Hertogenbosch. In the past few years, Nadia has applied herself to personalized grave monuments and urns. She discovered that the choice of urns is still impersonal and not very diverse. “Every human being, each life is unique. And at the end, there should be a personalized and fitting urn,” says Gonegaï. “Nothing is as personal as a face. A single glance at someone’s profile is often enough to recognize a person beyond any doubt. I wanted to do something with that.”

As a general rule, Gonegaï wants to create something personal every time, but she is also searching for something that can be realized in higher volumes. “I don’t want to lose the quality and craft in the process, ” she says. “My designs have to be durable, for life.”

An urn can be a cold object that is hidden on top of a cabinet. The Portrait urn is not scary. It’s a familiar face that deserves a warm spot in the home of his or her loved ones. The urn comes to life as soon as it is hit by sunlight or candlelight. “The shadow of the urn reveals the lines of the face. This way the loved one always remains in the company of his or her survivors.”

 

Via Design Boom

As far as I know, the Portrait Urn isn’t in production in the United States.

1

2

3

4

5

Portrait-urn-funeral-products

 

Death Facts: Part 29

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

Schmecky & Schmecky: Super-Expensive Funeral Directors

Schmecky   Schmecky  Super Expensive Funeral Directors   YouTube

This might make you snicker.

Do It Yourself Obituary Template

Newspapers double dip when it comes to obituaries.  They charge to print the obituary (city papers can easily charge over $1000 per obit) and then charge for people to purchase the newspaper.

And printed obituaries in the newspaper are ONLY valuable for people who don’t have a presence on social media.  If you have a Facebook profile, posting someone’s obituary on Facebook is more effective than having it printed in the newspaper.  In fact, in a decade or have one’s obituary printed in the newspaper will be as obsolete as the papers themselves.  Newspapers know this.

So, if you have a Facebook profile and you want to save money, here’s a general template you can use to write an obituary.  It’s a skeletal template, meant for you flesh out the details of a person’s life.   

Obituary Template

The Best “Will and Testament” Ever

This.  For the win.

1526619_722507324440298_1375141219_n

 

Go to Top