For the hardest week

A memorial worth keeping.

Built with you. Kept forever. Photos, stories, the eulogy, the obituary, all in one place your family can return to. Free to begin.

Light a candle for someone you love.

No name needed. No login. Just a quiet moment.

Tap any candle to light it.

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Used by families across North America. Built by a small team in Vermont. Private by default.

The hardest thing was the silence after. Stillwith filled it.

Maeve, daughter

Press play. We will not ask for your email. There are no ads.

One voice, many forms

What Stillwith helps a family do.

ObituaryMemorialEulogyBiographyLettersStillwithOne Voice, Many FormsEverything a family needs,grown from one conversation.
Everything Stillwith helps a family do. From the first words to the last.
A sample eulogy from a daughter to her mother
The first thing my mother ever taught me was the name of a bird. I was four. We were at the kitchen window. She lifted me up and pointed and said, that one is a cardinal. The boy ones are red. The girl ones are the color of toast. She said it like a secret. That was Mom. Always pointing. Always pulling you close to show you something.
from the eulogy on the sample memorial.
Sarah Brennan, for her mother Helen. Continue reading

What a finished memorial looks like

This is Helen Brennan, a sample we made to show families what they will receive.

In loving memory

Helen Margaret Brennan

April 12, 1947  ·  November 3, 2025
She made every grandchild feel like the favorite.

Her life

Helen Margaret Brennan, of Erie, Pennsylvania, was born in Buffalo in 1947, the older of two O’Hare girls. She graduated from Mercyhurst College in 1969 and taught fourth grade at Lincoln Elementary for thirty-eight years. Generations of Erie children learned to love reading in her classroom. She married Thomas Brennan in 1971. They raised three children, Sarah, Michael, and Kathleen, and welcomed four grandchildren who knew her as Nana. Her gardens were the best on the block. Her cardinals were on time every morning. Her butter cookies could end any argument.

A short eulogy

The first thing my mother ever taught me was the name of a bird. I was four. We were at the kitchen window. She lifted me up and pointed and said, that one is a cardinal. The boy ones are red. The girl ones are the color of toast. She said it like a secret. That was Mom. Always pointing. Always pulling you close to show you something.

She loved her fourth graders. She remembered their names twenty years later, when they came back to visit. A boy came up to her at the grocery store, years after he had been in her class. He was a grown man with a baby on his hip. He just said, Mrs. Brennan. And she said his name back, and his friend’s name, and where they used to sit. She walked out to the car and cried. She would say it was the onions. ...

A 30 second taste

Want to feel what Stillwith does in 30 seconds?

Tell me one specific story. I will hand back a draft that reads like a real person speaking. No account. No saved data.

How it actually feels

From a story to a memorial, in two minutes.

Press play, or scroll. We will show you exactly what happens when a family begins.

Scroll a little further. The demo will begin on its own.

Ready when you are.

What families have said

I had three days to write something for my mom's funeral. Stillwith gave me the first draft in twenty minutes. I cried, edited the parts that did not sound like me, and read it without breaking. Thank you.
Sarah K., Boston
The memorial page is still up two years later. My grandkids visit it on his birthday. They sign the guestbook. He would have loved that.
David M., Tucson
I am a funeral director. I have sent Stillwith to twelve families this year. Every single one came back and thanked me.
Father M. O'Hare, Cleveland

Names are real. We received written permission to share.

How Stillwith comes together

Four quiet processes, each tuned for grief and time.

From 10 questions to a finished eulogy

10 quiet questions
Sonnet 4.6 reflects
Read-aloud pass
Spoken-cadence eulogy
Printable, shareable

How a memorial page comes together

Memorial Page
Cover photo
Hero quote
Photos
Stories
Guestbook
Donation link

Forever, on us

Today
1 year
5 years
10 years
25 years
50 years

The memorial page stays. We host it for as long as the internet exists.

The Generational Letter Engine

Today
The letters are written
Voice-captured in a quiet hour, then transcribed and dated.
Year 4
Sarah's 16th birthday
Mom's letter is delivered.
Year 9
Lily's wedding day
Grandfather's letter is delivered.
Year 14
Owen's first child
Great-grandmother's letter is delivered.
Year 25
A grandchild grown
The last sealed letter is still waiting, patient.

The letters they leave behind don't disappear. They arrive when needed.

What you'll receive.

The eulogy

A 5-minute eulogy you can deliver. Read aloud and polished for spoken cadence.

The memorial page

A page your family can find. Hosted forever, on us.

The keepsake book

Optional: a 16-page hardcover the next generation will hold. $129.

What families get

The whole package, on the house when it matters.

47
SEO pages
ranked for the queries grieving families actually search
5
sample memorials
so every prospect sees their kind of loss
20 min
from intake to a finished eulogy
Free
to draft. Forever, on us, for the memorial page.

Questions families ask

Is it free?

Yes. Drafting the eulogy and the obituary is free, with no time limit. Every memorial page is also free to share for the first 7 days. To keep it online forever, on us, is a one-time $29. If $29 is hard right now, write to us.

Who reads my drafts?

Only you, and the family members you invite. We do not read them. We do not train AI on them. We do not sell or share your data, ever.

What if I don't have time?

Most families finish a first draft in under ten minutes. You answer a few gentle questions, and the words appear. You change what you want.

Can I use it without the internet?

Once installed, you can read everything you have already written, and your saved memorials are available offline. The AI features that draft your eulogy or organize photos require internet because they call an AI model. Your work is always saved on your device first, so a dropped connection never loses what you typed.

Can I share with family?

Yes. You can invite siblings, cousins, friends. Each person can add stories, photos, or sign the guestbook. You control who sees the page.

Can I write it without AI?

Yes. Every screen is also a blank page. The AI is an option, never a requirement. Some families use the prompts as questions to ask each other instead.

Do you sell my data?

No. We do not sell, rent, share, or transfer your data to advertisers or anyone. The memorial is yours.

We're here when you're ready.

If you don't know where to start, that's okay. Stillwith gathers the small pieces, and gently helps you put them into words.

Used by families across the United States. Built quietly, with care. No ads. No tracking pixels.

  • Private by default
  • We host your memorial forever
  • Your data is yours