WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND – When the pallbearers brought Phil McLean's coffin into the chapel, there were gasps before a wave of laughter rippled through the hundreds of mourners.
The coffin looked like a giant cream pastry.
"It overshadowed the sadness and the hard times in the last few weeks," said his widow, Debra. "The final memory in everyone's mind was of that doughnut, and Phil's sense of humor."
That coffin was the latest creation by Phil's cousin Ross Hall, who runs a business in Auckland, New Zealand, called Dying Art, which custom builds colorful coffins.
Other creations by Hall resemble a sailboat, a firetruck, a chocolate bar and Lego blocks. There have been glittering coffins covered in fake jewels, a casket inspired by the movie "The Matrix," and plenty of coffins depicting people's favorite beaches and holiday spots.
"There are people who are happy with a brown mahogany box, and that's great," said Hall. "But if they want to shout it out, I'm here to do it for them."
The idea first came to Hall about 15 years ago when he was writing a will and contemplating his own death.
"How do I want to go out?" he thought to himself, deciding it wouldn't be like everyone else. "So I put in my will that I want a red box with flames on it."