Skip to content
How to Create a Remembrance Corner at Home
How to Create a Remembrance Corner at Home

How to Create a Remembrance Corner at Home

A remembrance corner at home is a small place where memory can live without taking over the whole house. It might be a windowsill, shelf, side table, balcony corner, or quiet place near a favorite chair. The purpose is not to display grief perfectly. It is to give love a steady place to be seen.

You can create a remembrance corner with simple items: a photo, a sympathy card, a candle, a plant, a written memory, or an EXQUIVERA memorial wind chime. The best corner is personal, easy to care for, and gentle enough to live with every day.

Choose the right place

Start with a place that feels calm. It does not need to be central. In fact, many people prefer a corner that is visible but not constantly demanding attention. A bedroom dresser, living room shelf, covered balcony, or window area can all work.

"Those we love don't go away. They walk beside us every day."

What to include

Item Purpose Tip
Photo Keeps one memory visible Choose one image, not many
Card or letter Holds words of comfort Keep it easy to reread
Plant or flower Adds life and care Choose low maintenance
Memorial wind chime Adds sound, movement, and ritual Place near a window or sheltered corner

Adding a memorial wind chime

The 32 inch EXQUIVERA memorial wind chime is well suited to home remembrance corners because it fits smaller spaces and can be placed near a window, balcony, or quiet indoor area. The 37 inch EXQUIVERA chime is better for a covered porch or garden when you want a deeper outdoor tone.

EXQUIVERA 32 inch memorial wind chime heart-shaped sail detail for a home remembrance corner

Because EXQUIVERA wind chimes include a sympathy card and gift-ready box, the card itself can become part of the corner. You can keep the card visible for a while, then store it with other memories later.

Keep it simple

A remembrance corner can become emotionally heavy if it holds too many objects. Start small. One photo, one card, and one sensory element may be enough. You can change the space over time as grief changes. Nothing has to be permanent.

Small rituals to try

  • Light a candle for one minute on a meaningful date.
  • Read one card or letter when grief feels loud.
  • Say the loved one's name when you pass the corner.
  • Open a window and let the wind chime move naturally.
  • Place a seasonal flower there on birthdays or anniversaries.

Is this right for you?

  • Good fit: you want a quiet place to remember at home.
  • Good fit: objects, photos, or sound feel comforting.
  • Use caution: visible reminders feel too painful right now.
  • Choose another approach: a memory box or private drawer feels safer.

Think about sound gently

If using a wind chime indoors or near a balcony, choose a place where sound is occasional. Avoid bedrooms if you are easily startled at night. Avoid shared walls or neighbor windows. A memorial wind chime should support peace, not create stress.

Choosing 32 inch vs. 37 inch for home remembrance

The 32 inch EXQUIVERA memorial wind chime is usually better for indoor corners, apartments, balconies, and window areas. It is easier to place and less visually dominant. The 37 inch chime is better for a covered porch, garden, or family outdoor space where its deeper tone has room to carry.

If you are unsure, choose based on the space rather than the emotion. A larger grief does not require a larger object. A smaller, well-placed remembrance item can feel more comforting than something that overwhelms the home.

If the corner is for a whole family

Ask each person what they would like included. One person may want a photo; another may want a card; another may prefer the space to stay simple. A shared remembrance corner should not force everyone to grieve the same way. Keep it flexible and allow items to change.

If adding a wind chime, choose a location where family members can step toward it when they want to, rather than hearing it constantly in every room.

If you are helping someone else create one

Do not arrive with a fully planned memorial display unless they asked for help. Instead, offer gently: "Would it feel helpful to make a small remembrance corner, or would you rather keep things private right now?" If they say yes, let them choose the items.

Caring for the corner over time

A remembrance corner can change with grief. In the first months, you may want it visible every day. Later, you may want fewer items. Around anniversaries, you may add a flower or card again. This flexibility is healthy. The corner should serve your grief, not become a rule you have to follow.

If a wind chime is part of the space, check its hook and placement occasionally. If the sound becomes too much, move it to a quieter place or keep it as a visual remembrance item for a season.

There is no wrong pace. A remembrance corner can be built in one afternoon or slowly over months, changing as your heart needs more space or more quiet.

When to change the corner

You can change the remembrance corner whenever you need to. Add a photo. Remove a candle. Move the wind chime outside in spring. Put everything away for a while. None of these choices mean you are forgetting. They simply mean your grief has different needs in different seasons.

FAQ

Where should I create a remembrance corner?

Choose a calm, safe place such as a window, shelf, side table, dresser, or covered balcony.

Can a wind chime be part of an indoor remembrance corner?

Yes, if it is placed securely and the sound feels comforting rather than overwhelming.

What if I need to put the corner away?

That is okay. Putting items away does not mean love has ended. It means you are caring for your grief honestly.

A remembrance corner is not about holding on perfectly. It is about making one small place where love can remain close in a way you can live with.

Previous article Can Memorial Wind Chimes Be Used Indoors?
Next article Memorial Wind Chime Ideas for a Small Remembrance Corner