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Making a memorial slideshow

A few quiet minutes of photographs, made to play without a hitch.

What the slideshow is for

A memorial slideshow gives everyone a few minutes to simply look — at a whole life, gathered in one place. During the service it usually plays in the moment of reflection, set to music, while no one has to speak. At the reception it can play on a quiet loop instead, giving guests something to stand beside and talk about.

Two things make a slideshow good: photographs chosen with care, and a file that plays the moment someone presses play. This guide covers both, and the second matters more than most people expect.

How long, and how many photographs

The arithmetic is simple: each photograph holds the screen for about seven or eight seconds, so one song carries roughly thirty photographs.

If the family has gathered two hundred photographs, that is a gift — keep them all for the reception loop, and choose the strongest thirty or so for the service.

Choosing the photographs

The music

One or two pieces are enough for a service slideshow. A song they loved is the natural first choice; if their favourite feels too heavy or too bright for the room, an instrumental version of it often sits exactly right. Let the music decide the length — end the photographs where the song ends, rather than fading it mid-phrase.

Making sure it plays on the day

Almost everything that goes wrong with a slideshow goes wrong in the last step, and all of it is preventable a day ahead:

When you are ready

A slideshow usually takes the reflection moment in the order of events — if you are planning the service itself, our guide to planning an order of service shows where it sits. Solace Paper is preparing memorial slideshow templates with the same care as the rest of the collection — designed to export cleanly and play anywhere. The collection opens soon at our Etsy shop.

All guides · Planning a celebration of life