What are Burial Shrouds? An Interview with Kate Hoover, Part One

Kate Hoover of Vale Shrouds talks about what inspired her to start her shroud-making business and what the shroud-making process entails

Today SevenPonds speaks with Kate Hoover, the founder of Vale Shrouds. Based in Brooklyn, NY, Kate studied sociology at Barnard College and fashion design at Parsons School of Design. She has worked in the garment and publishing industries in various design capacities. After practicing yoga for over a decade, she received her yoga teacher training certification from Integral Yoga in 2011. She studied and volunteered with the New York Zen Center for Contemplative Care from 2012-2014. In the first part of her two-part interview, she discusses the inspiration behind Vale Shrouds, what the process of making burial shrouds entails and whether she offers workshops for those interested. 

 Kate Hoover of Vale Shrouds

Credit: Kate Hoover

Zoë: What are shrouds?

Kate: Shrouds are pieces of fabric used to wrap a body in preparation for burial or cremation. They can be as simple as a quilt or long piece of fabric wound around the body, or as elaborate as one’s imagination.

Zoë: What is Vale Shrouds and how did it get started?

Kate: Vale Shrouds is a burial shroud-sewing service that grew out of a contemplative caregiving practice.

In 2012, I began volunteering as a hospital chaplain intern through a contemplative caregiving program. During the program’s training, my classmates and I were asked to spend time considering our own deaths and planning our own funerals. The idea behind this practice was that you can’t really sit in a present way with a patient’s dying unless you have made a good faith effort to face your own.

I became interested in green burial through this assignment to plan my own funeral. I was drawn to the way it preserved green space from development, its simple directness and its lack of waste. I was also drawn to the intimacy and community home ceremonies and caring for one’s dead (for instance washing and dressing the body, decorating a casket) allowed. For me, the relationships I’ve had with people have been the most important part of my life; I couldn’t imagine that not being a part of my death.

The caregiving training culminated in a final project of our choosing, and I decided to sew a green burial shroud for myself. I put my background in sewing and patternmaking into play for the shroud’s construction. I wanted the design to be of the moment — in the spirit of our caregiving training — so I didn’t look at other shrouds; I just sat and wondered what a shroud should do and how to make it do that.

The moment I knew there was something more to keep exploring was when I shared the shroud in our final class show-and-tell. My classmates were (surprisingly) receptive to the shroud, wanting to touch it and ask questions. The mood became almost playful, and they picked me up in the shroud and carried me around in it. To look up and see all these people I cared for around me, it was powerful. It helped me understand how a shrouded burial could encourage involvement and community.

The act of sewing my own shroud was also powerful. As a practice, it went from an abstract discernment — what are the most important people and events to me, what has meant the most to me, what do I value and want to carry with me — to something that became very real and confronting. To see the shroud come together was like watching my mortality become real. However, it was also very life affirming. By defining those things that are important to me, I could make sure to give them more attention with whatever remaining time I have.

To bring us to today and why I kept making the shrouds, people were asking for them and I enjoy making them. A funeral director I met while planning my funeral gave me the feedback to include straps to close the shroud on the top and to include an absorptive layer. Other than incorporating those changes, the design has remained the same as the original one I made for myself.

I also make shrouds for pets. The day I showed the class my shroud, people suggested I also make ones for pets. I searched online to see what was available, and the shrouds I found lacked warmth. So I created a soft bed, something that would fit in a carrier so that it’d be easy to carry the pet home from the vet.

Kate Hoover of Vale Shrouds Preparing Shroud

Credit: Kate Hoover

Zoë: What does the process of making burial shrouds entail?

Kate: I approach shroud making as a contemplative practice. That’s how I got started in making shrouds, and I believe it’s important to keep that in play going forward. It’s kind of like how food that’s prepared with love tastes different; my hope is that the intention with which my shrouds are made is transferred into them.

I sew everything myself right now, to keep that connection, that touch. I keep the space quiet and my mind and heart focused on a non-denominational prayer asking for support, protection and care for the deceased and their loved ones. It’s intentionally somewhat vague; I don’t want to put my agenda on anyone. Coming from the hospital contemplative caregiving training, I have a lot of respect for meeting people where they are in their beliefs or non-beliefs. Ultimately, the shroud is about who they are and what they do with it; my prayer is there to hold the space for whatever they want to fill it with.

Right now I offer one main type of shroud: natural cotton/hemp with twill tape straps and wood ring closures. The fabrics and trimmings are all natural and up to green burial requirements. It’s lined with a cotton fleece for absorbing liquids and it has straps for lifting and carrying the body.

The idea is that it’s a blank canvas: a clean design that doesn’t necessarily need anything added and that is timeless. It’s a neutral background so that the flowers and mementos one adds become the focus. At the same time, the design allows for personalization with things like paint or embroidery.

You could pre-order a shroud like the ones I make, and let it rest in your home (it can be stored in a way that will prevent deterioration). You then have the option to either personalize it over time or at time of death. The shroud can, in effect, grow with you.

I can also customize to a degree. If someone has a favorite quilt or fabric, that can be incorporated. If the shroud is going into a casket, the carrying straps may not be a necessity; a shroud can be made without those.

Zoë: Do you offer any workshops for people interested in making shrouds?

Kate: I am putting ideas together right now about forming workshops for people interested in making their own burial shroud. It was such a profound experience for me to sew mine; creating a space for other people to have that experience is something I would love to be a part of. If people are interested, I’d encourage them to reach out to me.

Come back next week for Part Two of her interview.

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2 Responses to What are Burial Shrouds? An Interview with Kate Hoover, Part One

  1. I was give. The link to your site by Marjorie McCoy.
    Would you like to vibe to Empty Hand Zen Center to talk about your work?

    Report this comment

  2. I am currently embroidering a sentimental piece of fabric that belonged to my late Mum.
    I would really like to somehow incorporate this fabric into my own hqndmade shroud.

    However I have a question?
    The fabric was bought in the 1970’s and we think it may be nylon. If this is the case would nylon be
    an allowable fabric to be buried within a coffin.
    Thank you for this opportunity to converse with you.

    Report this comment

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