Hi,
I am looking for information on cremation urns. I plan on making one
for my future use ( a long time from now, I hope) out of wood. I know
they are sized at about 1 cu.in. / pound of person. Do they require a
liner or are they just a fancy box? I have Doug Stowe's books on box
making so I have a lot of ideas for boxes. Ideas and suggestions are
appreciated. Thanks, JG
Thanks everyone one for your help.
Cheers, JG
JGS wrote:
> Hi,
> I am looking for information on cremation urns. I plan on making one
> for my future use ( a long time from now, I hope) out of wood. I know
> they are sized at about 1 cu.in. / pound of person. Do they require a
> liner or are they just a fancy box? I have Doug Stowe's books on box
> making so I have a lot of ideas for boxes. Ideas and suggestions are
> appreciated. Thanks, JG
JGS <[email protected]> wrote:
> I am looking for information on cremation urns. I plan on making one
>for my future use ( a long time from now, I hope) out of wood. I know
>they are sized at about 1 cu.in. / pound of person. Do they require a
>liner or are they just a fancy box? I have Doug Stowe's books on box
>making so I have a lot of ideas for boxes. Ideas and suggestions are
>appreciated. Thanks, JG
The crematorium will put the remains through a pulverizer so that you
are left with loose ash. The packaging may be different among
different funeral homes but the one I have experience with was a
plastic box about 4"x6"x3". The box I made for it is the simple teak
box on this page:
http://www.ucalgary.ca/~kmuldrew/woodworking/cheaphack.html
I think turned urns are more popular than boxes.
Ken Muldrew
[email protected]
(remove all letters after y in the alphabet)
I made the urn for my Dad. The funeral home said to make it about
8x8x8. They then offered to buy any extra I might make.
Mike M
On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 08:29:35 -0400, JGS <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Hi,
> I am looking for information on cremation urns. I plan on making one
>for my future use ( a long time from now, I hope) out of wood. I know
>they are sized at about 1 cu.in. / pound of person. Do they require a
>liner or are they just a fancy box? I have Doug Stowe's books on box
>making so I have a lot of ideas for boxes. Ideas and suggestions are
>appreciated. Thanks, JG
My uncle makes those here in Oregon he told me that you are required the
plastic bag and a container to put the bag in inside the urn. Like a hard
plastic sealable boxt that would fit inside.
I hope this helps.
Al
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>i agree - the only requirment i'm aware of is that the remains should
> be in a plastic bag just to prevent accidents if the urn should fall or
> just be opened.
>
On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 08:29:35 -0400, JGS <[email protected]> wrote:
>Hi,
> I am looking for information on cremation urns. I plan on making one
>for my future use ( a long time from now, I hope) out of wood. I know
>they are sized at about 1 cu.in. / pound of person. Do they require a
>liner or are they just a fancy box? I have Doug Stowe's books on box
>making so I have a lot of ideas for boxes. Ideas and suggestions are
>appreciated. Thanks, JG
It would probably depend on what state you're in and the state/county/city
laws..
In CA, we found that the ashes have to be in a sealed metal container, done at
the crematorium, then placed in whatever container you put around that..
If you're thinking of turning an urn, Check out this section of Bill Grumbine's
site:
http://www.enter.net/~ultradad/urn.html
Mac
https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis
https://home.comcast.net/~mac.davis/wood_stuff.htm
Has to be sealable; friction closure is not enough. The crematorium will
place the ashes in a plastic bag which goes insode the urn so no liner
needed.
On Sun, 30 Apr 2006 07:40:36 -0700, Mike M <[email protected]>
wrote:
>
>I made the urn for my Dad. The funeral home said to make it about
>8x8x8. They then offered to buy any extra I might make.
>
>Mike M
>
>On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 08:29:35 -0400, JGS <[email protected]>
>wrote:
>
>>Hi,
>> I am looking for information on cremation urns. I plan on making one
>>for my future use ( a long time from now, I hope) out of wood. I know
>>they are sized at about 1 cu.in. / pound of person. Do they require a
>>liner or are they just a fancy box? I have Doug Stowe's books on box
>>making so I have a lot of ideas for boxes. Ideas and suggestions are
>>appreciated. Thanks, JG
"JGS" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi,
> I am looking for information on cremation urns. I plan on making one
> for my future use ( a long time from now, I hope) out of wood. I know
> they are sized at about 1 cu.in. / pound of person. Do they require a
> liner or are they just a fancy box? I have Doug Stowe's books on box
> making so I have a lot of ideas for boxes. Ideas and suggestions are
> appreciated. Thanks, JG
>
The only two I've seen ( one wood & one plastic) have the remains in a
plastic bag. So I guess it's kind of a liner. The one my mother is in is
about 7"H 7"W 5"D and she was 5'3" and around 160 give or take. It's not
much bigger than a Ziploc freezer bag. I'm sure if you make it small enough
for the mantle and not so big it needs wheels you should be fine.
Jim
On Sat, 29 Apr 2006 08:29:35 -0400, JGS wrote:
> Hi,
> I am looking for information on cremation urns. I plan on making one
> for my future use ( a long time from now, I hope) out of wood. I know
> they are sized at about 1 cu.in. / pound of person. Do they require a
> liner or are they just a fancy box? I have Doug Stowe's books on box
> making so I have a lot of ideas for boxes. Ideas and suggestions are
> appreciated. Thanks, JG
My Dad had my step mother cremated. He is using an ornate antique jewery
box made of wood for her remains. Her remains were returned from the
funeral director in a heavy duty sealed plastic bag placed in a brown
corragated cardboard box about 7"x7"x7" in size. He keeps the cardboard
box inside the jewery box until he is gone and both my dad and step
mother's remains will be poured into the ocean / body of water, together,
per his request. The jewery box is approx. 12" x 9" x 9", large enough to
contain the corregated box. I think it represents a respectful way of
"storage"(a better term escapes me right now) until the time comes to
carry out their last request.