For families considering a personalised memorial, not knowing what the design process involves can make it feel more daunting than it needs to be. In practice, it is structured and manageable — and a good supplier guides you through each stage.
Step 1: Initial Consultation
The process begins with a conversation covering the cemetery requirements, your preferences, and the practical parameters: size, material, budget, and timeline. You do not need a design in mind — the consultation is exploratory, and a skilled supplier will ask the right questions.
Step 2: Design Brief
Following the consultation, the supplier works from a design brief confirming the stone type, dimensions, inscription wording, any motifs or imagery, and lettering style. For families commissioning custom headstones, this is where all personalisation decisions are confirmed before any design work begins.
Step 3: Design Proof
The designer produces a visual proof showing the inscription, layout, and decorative details. Most families go through one to three rounds of revision. There is no pressure to sign off quickly — this is the stage at which errors can be caught and adjustments made at no additional cost.
Step 4: Inscription Verification
Before the stone is cut, the inscription should be carefully proofread by more than one family member. A responsible supplier also verifies it internally. Once the proof is signed off in writing, the design moves to production.
Step 5: Cemetery Consent and Production
The approved design is submitted to the cemetery for sign-off, which typically takes five to ten working days. Once consent is received, the stone is cut, engraved, and finished. Standard production takes four to eight weeks depending on complexity.
Step 6: Installation
The completed memorial is installed at the cemetery by the supplier or an approved installer. You will be notified when installation is complete.
Standard headstone templates serve a purpose — they are straightforward, familiar, and carry a neutral dignity. But more families are now choosing something different: a memorial designed specifically around the person it commemorates.




