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CELEBRATE THEIR LIFE WITH A DONATION THAT MAKES A DIFFERENCE

Donate in honour of someone who‘s shaped your life this Celebration Day. Your gift will continue their legacy by supporting vital work in the fields of mental health, cancer, life-threatening childhood illnesses, and end-of-life care.

All donations will be shared equally between Mind (Reg Charity No. 219830), The Royal Marsden Cancer Charity (Reg Charity No. 1095197), Make-A-Wish Foundation® UK (Reg Charity No. 295672) and Hospice UK (Reg Charity No. 1014851).

Who are you celebrating today? Share a name, a few words, or a memory — if it feels right. We‘d be honoured to read it.

SHARE THEIR NAME. CELEBRATE THEIR LIFE.

Who you remember — and how — is entirely up to you.

You might share a photo, a recipe, a quote, a place, a song lyric, a funny story, or a piece of advice or inspiration — whether they were someone you knew personally or someone who simply inspired you.

Your memory will become part of a collaborative artwork we're already working on for Celebration Day 2026, woven together with others submissions into a shared tapestry of reflection, storytelling, and connection.

If you’d like to receive updates about the installation, just let us know at the end of your submission. We can't wait to hear about those who have made a lasting impact on your life.

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DRAG AND DROP (Maximum 5 files)

On Celebration Day, I’ll honour my late father with his egg mousse pâté

Thousands of words, hundreds of books and some records even: my family has been published, voraciously, over the years. But Edith’s poetry, Osbert’s autobiography, Sacheverell’s travels, my own scribblings, all pale when set against my father’s greatest triumph. It was in August 1968, featured in the Evening Standard: Francis Sitwell’s egg mousse pâté, supplied via the cookery columnist Monica Mawson. And this was no mere PR frippery, offered up to somehow soften the reputation of one of the City’s great PR men and lunchers; described also in the paper as a member of the International Wine and Food Society. It was a dish he cooked repeatedly over the decades, exclusively, I recall, for lunch parties. He would get mixing in the kitchen and then set the mousse across the dining room table in little pots and friends and family would eat it with crisp melba toast.