It used to take three to seven days to reconstruct a person’s face using traditional materials and methods, like gypsum plaster, embalming fluid, plastic cement, and hand stitching. But the funeral home’s 3D printer can build a complete facial mold in half a day, while a partial reconstruction takes just three to four hours. The 3D printed mold can be created quickly and conveniently, and is easy for any of the funeral home workers to make.
Deputy director Li Yuguang, 101 Research Institute, said, “After scanning a 2D photo of the deceased into the computer program, a worker can generate a full 3D digital model of the deceased person’s face with just the touch of a mouse button.”
While the Babaoshan Funeral Parlor is the first in Beijing to use 3D printing technology, it’s certainly been used in the Chinese mortuary industry elsewhere. The IB Times reports that last year, the Longhua Funeral Home was the first in the country to repair corpses by creating accurate replicas of missing body parts through 3D printing technology. We’ve also seen a Chinese funeral platform turn to 3D printed urns for cremation, a trend that has also taken hold in Japan and in the US (and even for Prince). But no matter how much innovative technology is introduced, in China, the death care industry, while offering plenty of job opportunities and a good salary, is still traditionally looked upon with some suspicion.
Taiwanese instructor Lin Leijie said, “Traditionally, older folks would say this profession is only for those people who are not married, have no children, and have no choice.”
Death care workers, like undertakers, are essentially social outcasts, and can be thought of as unlucky. In an attempt to change this opinion, the Ministry of Civil Affairs even hosted the National Cremation Skills Competition; the winner received China’s most prestigious workers’ award, the May 1 Labor Medal. But the people who take care of the deceased still don’t garner much respect, and China’s funeral industry is making attempts to overcome this.
Qu continued, “Now, it is more safe for our families.”
Regardless of whether or not the 3D printing technology now utilized in the Babaoshan Funeral Parlor keeps disease from spreading, we do know that it can help family members say goodbye to their loved ones with a dignified and meaningful open casket funeral. Discuss in the Chinese Funeral Homes forum at 3DPB.com.
[Sources/Images: IB Times, Hexun News, The Beijinger]