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How to Get a Fingerprint for Jewelry Keepsakes

How to Get a Fingerprint for Jewelry Keepsakes

A piece of fingerprint jewelry is a beautiful way to keep a unique part of your loved one close at hand and often close to your heart. These are one-of-a-kind pieces of jewelry and a loving way to honor the memory of a loved one who’s passed.

Fingerprint Jewelry

Fingerprint jewelry comes in every style and type, from delicate pendants to formal cufflinks. Fingerprint jewelry makes a lovely gift to family and friends who have also suffered a loss. There’s no other jewelry in the world like jewelry made with your loved one’s fingerprint. Comfort yourself with a stunning piece of fingerprint jewelry today.

How to Get a Loved One’s Fingerprint for Keepsake Cremation Jewelry

fingerprint jewelry

Fingerprint jewelry makers prefer a clear fingerprint to make your piece or pieces of jewelry - the crisper the image, the better. This is why thumbprint jewelry is so popular - it’s the most common fingerprint, and its lines are more precise. A thorough search through the deceased’s files may reveal a fingerprint card, and it’s common for people to have had them made for one reason or another. If you don’t have immediate access to a copy of your loved one’s fingerprint, we’ll review ways to find their fingerprint in the upcoming sections.

Find Their Fingerprint Through Their Job

Many professions require fingerprints as part of their security and background checks. If your loved one was in a profession that requires fingerprints, you might be able to get a copy from a place where they were employed. There is power in being willing to ask, and once you explain you want the fingerprints for cremation jewelry, you’re very likely to receive help.

  • Teacher: many teaching jobs take fingerprints as a background check before working with children. If your loved one worked at a college or university, it’s still a good idea to check with the administration to see if they have a fingerprint on file.
  • Military: every military branch takes its member’s fingerprints and will likely have them on file even if it’s been years since your loved one passed. It may seem intimidating to reach out to a branch of the military, but you’re sure to receive a warm welcome, even if they aren’t able to help you out. It’s always a good idea to ask, especially for something as important as memorial fingerprint jewelry.
  • Law Enforcement: as you can imagine, law enforcement officers are all fingerprinted. Much of the same advice for the military applies here. If this was a recent loss, your loved one’s co-workers likely want to help, and if finding their fingerprint files would help, you’re sure to get them.
  • Healthcare: many healthcare workers, especially doctors and nurses, must be fingerprinted as part of their job. So, if your loved one worked in the healthcare field, there is likely a record of their fingerprints on file somewhere that you can use for your keepsake jewelry.

Many professions require fingerprints, and some organizations may need them for security, so it may be worth the time to talk to your loved one’s old job about their fingerprint.

Find Their Fingerprint Through Official Documents

You may be able to find a fingerprint copy on official documents.

  • Drivers License: contact the DMV where your loved one received their most recent driver’s license. Some states will take fingerprints or thumbprints as part of their driver’s license application process. Tell them why you want a copy of the fingerprints. Not every state takes fingerprints, however.
  • Notary Public: a notary public is an official that records official signatures. They may take a fingerprint as part of this process. If your loved one signed anything before a notary public, they might have had their fingerprint taken. Notary publics keep their records for five years, so you may be able to track down your loved one’s fingerprint that way. An excellent place to start would be their bank.
  • Arrest Records: while this is less than ideal, if your loved one was ever arrested, this is a place where you could obtain their fingerprints. Explain why you want the prints, and you’ll likely receive a copy.

Find Their Fingerprint Through the Hospital

Hospitals take footprints of all babies born, along with the mother’s fingerprint. So, a hospital may be a resource for finding a footprint or a fingerprint.

Do-It-Yourself Method Of Obtaining a Fingerprint

Take Their Fingerprint While in Hospice

This option, of course, is only workable if your loved one is still alive. If you have a loved one in hospice and are beginning to prepare for their death, you can take their finger or thumbprint. It’s ok to prepare for their end this way. Fingerprint jewelry will help all the people who love this special person and who will be hurting when they’re gone.

Find Their Fingerprint Through the Funeral Home

Finally, you can reach out to your loved one’s funeral home. You can request that they take fingerprints before the funeral. If it’s after the funeral, many funeral homes take fingerprints as part of their records, so they may be able to give you a copy, even if it’s been a few years.

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