
An intimate Memorial Art,
Commission a memorial print that transforms grief into solace and beauty
Innerstela,
Where Legacy Becomes Art
"Innerstela transforms the ashes of your loved one into luminous, bespoke works of art, each as singular as a fingerprint, each unveiling galaxies unseen.
Commission your print
Boutique Capacity We open a limited number of commissions each month to honor the pace of our studio. Join the Studio List
“More than remembrance, every Innerstela piece is a passage, where grief is transformed into beauty, and memory becomes an heirloom. Through the quiet ritual of creation, we offer solace, reverence, and legacy for generations”.

A Delicate Sample With only a small portion of ashes, we begin the transformation.
Scientific Artistry Using our patented method, galaxies appear, captured with precision and care.
Museum-Grade Print Each image is printed on Hahnemühle archival paper, certified, and returned with your sample.
Acquire your Print
“Every Innerstela print is crafted as a collector’s piece authenticated, numbered, and printed on museum-grade Hahnemühle paper. A legacy worthy of your family, designed to endure generations.”
May your Innerstela journey be profound, intimate, and imbued with love.
Welcome to something rare, beautiful, and boundless.
Testimonials
Dolores Rodriguez (Mother of Ernesto Adrián García)
México.
The experience of being present and observing the ashes of my son Ernesto Adrián, known as Netito, was something incredible, it felt as if I were transported to another dimension.
To see those colors take the form of galaxies of the universe, as if I were inside a star or a comet, in trying to define the experience of seeing the image its magnitude and clarity, I realized that photograph was of my beloved son.
I felt close to him, and could almost hear his sigh of magic and melody, I am so deeply grateful for this majestic opportunity.
Thank you, thank you so much Gabriela.
Testimonials
Celiana Cárdenas (Daughter of Clemencia Pallares)
México.
My name is Celiana Cárdenas Pallares, and I am the eldest daughter of Clemencia Pallares Ortiz, known to all as Clemen. When Gabriela first spoke to me about her project, I felt immediate fascination and deep intrigue. How could it be, I wondered, that after death, after ceasing to exist in this plane, she might reveal the infinite? My mother passed away after five years of living with Vascular Dementia, which gradually advanced into Alzheimer’s.
In the final chapter of her life, she no longer spoke, and her mind no longer recognized me, yet her heart always did. She smiled, she kissed my face, and she caressed me with a tenderness that felt like brushstrokes — the back of her hand tracing from top to bottom, from bottom to top, with full attention and quiet concentration. I often thought that with each stroke, my face came back into being for her, as her smile widened, became more radiant, more true.
As my mother’s personality slowly dissolved, I felt her very essence slipping away as well.
The morning she died, my sister Gabriela and I were by her side. She passed in my home.
When I saw her body bereft of those twenty-one grams of soul, I understood with clarity that the form before me no longer belonged to my mother. What defined her — her essence, her spirit — had already departed. Later, when Gabriela revealed the image she had captured from her ashes, I felt what I can only describe as the return of that essence. What I believed lost on the morning of her death had come back to me. In that image I felt her infinite love, infinite and ever-present, enduring beyond time.
I understood then that mortality is not an ending, but a transformation and a vanishing into origin. And if I am of the origin, then I am eternal.
My mother was a painter. I am a cinematographer. Images were, and remain, our shared language. It is only natural that her immortality would manifest in the form of an image.
Thank you, Gabriela, for teaching me to see my mother among the stars..