StoneMemoir

Secular remembrance

A secular memorial that stays true to the life, not labels

Centre poetry, music, causes, and friendships without importing language that never fit them—still calm, still dignified.

StoneMemoir’s secular path keeps copy neutral and generous, ideal for humanist services, direct cremation follow-ups, or simply private belief.

Minimal abstract horizon in slate and gold suggesting clarity for a secular or humanist memorial.

On StoneMemoir

Neutral language, generous space

Humanist, atheist, spiritual-but-not-religious, or simply private—your page can follow the person’s vocabulary without importing creeds they never claimed.

No assumed creed

Write in the voice they used—whether that was science, nature, art, or quiet atheism.

Moderated guestbook

Keep sharp disagreements and unsolicited advice out of a space meant for remembrance.

Flexible storytelling

Blend timelines, playlists, quotations, and galleries the way they lived—not as an awkward afterthought.

Secular remembrance

When the funeral was personal, not prescriptive

Many UK families mix traditions or skip them entirely. Your page can reflect what actually happened, honestly.

  • Publish on your timeline

    There is no rush to ‘go live’—draft until the tone matches your grief.

  • Partners can help

    Funeral directors using StoneMemoir can co-author, then hand ownership to the family.

  • One payment, lasting place

    £89.99 including VAT, with lifetime access—no upsell tiers.

Clean stylised memorial tablet with sparse engraved lines in StoneMemoir brand palette.

Honest storytelling

Tell the funeral that actually happened

Many UK families blend formats: a celebrant at a crematorium, a woodland gathering, or almost no ritual at all. StoneMemoir lets you describe what occurred without forcing prefabricated religious wording.

Poetry, playlists, causes, and friendships can sit beside photographs and timeline milestones—moderated guestbook included—so the tone stays yours.

StoneMemoir

You do not owe the crowd every complexity of a human life. You owe a faithful glimpse.

— From our writing guidance for families

Your path

Three calm steps to a live memorial

Straightforward steps whether you are planning ahead or catching up after a sudden loss.

  1. Step 1

    Create and select secular remembrance

    Choose the secular path for neutral prompts, then write in the voice they used in life.

  2. Step 2

    Shape sections your way

    Mix biography, celebration-of-life notes, quotations, and galleries without religious boilerplate.

  3. Step 3

    Publish on your timeline

    Share when ready; lifetime access means you can keep refining for years.

Family voices

What families say

Real experiences from people who wanted a respectful, lasting space for remembrance.
The guided steps helped us publish something meaningful in one evening. We added more stories over the next weeks without feeling rushed.
Sarah M.Created a memorial for her mother
What mattered most was having one dignified page to share with family abroad. It felt calm and private, not like posting grief publicly.
David L.Created a memorial for his brother
The partner handover was straightforward. Families could begin gently, and then manage everything themselves when they were ready.
A. ThompsonFuneral director partner

When you are ready

Begin their secular memorial today

Draft freely, invite a friend to proofread, and publish when the page feels like them.

StoneMemoir costs £89.99 once (including VAT) with lifetime access—no subscriptions beside their name.