Clarity for every guest
Explain which service was where, offer translations for key passages, and stop relatives guessing from a group-chat patchwork.
Interfaith & blended families
Name the rites that happened, welcome guests from every background, and keep tributes kind—without pretending a life was simpler than it was.
StoneMemoir lets you choose a primary remembrance tone while biography, readings, and modules carry the threads that do not fit a single label.
On StoneMemoir
Explain which service was where, offer translations for key passages, and stop relatives guessing from a group-chat patchwork.
Hold guestbook messages for review so well-meaning but clumsy theology does not land beside their portrait.
Add thanks, second ceremonies, or charity totals as the first weeks settle—lifetime access, no renewal.
Interfaith & blended families
Children of interfaith homes often do the translation work. Give them a steady page they can share without re-explaining every detail.
Pick the closest remembrance path
Choose the tone that best matches public-facing identity; use biography for honest nuance.
Publish when logistics allow
Draft privately while flights and second services are arranged, then share one authoritative link.
Built for UK families
Pricing includes VAT; language assumes British funeral rhythms and distances.
The detail guests need
The funeral might follow one tradition while biography carries another. StoneMemoir keeps hierarchy clear: what happened, when, where, and who may attend next—so cousins abroad stop guessing from forwards.
Moderation helps when grief and theology collide in public comments. You decide what appears beside their portrait.
StoneMemoir
The page is for mourners, not for scoring theological points.
— From our interfaith family guide
Your path
Start with logistics if theology feels too heavy on day one—you can deepen the story later.
Pick the path that best matches how the family will speak publicly; use biography for other threads.
List venues, times, and key passages—with short notes for guests unfamiliar with a rite.
Share one steady web address; approve guestbook messages before they appear.
Family voices
“The guided steps helped us publish something meaningful in one evening. We added more stories over the next weeks without feeling rushed.”
“What mattered most was having one dignified page to share with family abroad. It felt calm and private, not like posting grief publicly.”
“The partner handover was straightforward. Families could begin gently, and then manage everything themselves when they were ready.”
When you are ready
You can start with names, dates, and service details—then add readings and photographs when you have breath.
StoneMemoir costs £89.99 once (including VAT) with lifetime access—no subscriptions beside their name.