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Your Legacy in Living Color

Mid adult female layer and senior couple going through will during a meeting in the living room.
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There is a famous scene in The Wizard of Oz where Dorothy steps into the magical Land of Oz and is transported from a black-and-white world to a Technicolor one.

The phrase in living color originates from TV and film advertising in the mid-20th century, when black-and-white imagery was standard and color television was a novelty. It represented something more vibrant and lifelike: Viewers were seeing real people rendered in natural color, often for the first time.

What started as a literal description of color TV technology has transformed into a cultural idiom for expressive and authentic portrayal. That shift can also apply to your estate plan, taking it from a purely formal black-and-white documentation process to a more vibrant representation of your life in its varied hues and tones.

There are many ways to add color to your estate plan—ways that help paint a true-to-life picture of who you are within the standard planning canvas.

Estate Planning Can Let You Show Your True Colors

What is the first thing you think of when you hear the term estate planning?

It may be paperwork or attorney meetings mixed with a fair amount of legalese and difficult decisions like who should receive what, who should be in charge, equal versus fair inheritance shares, and end-of-life preferences.

Estate planning does involve all these things, expressed through documents such as wills, trusts, powers of attorney, and advance medical directives. But estate planning is also much more than that.

Here are several ways you can start to color in your estate plan, moving beyond a black-and-white collection of documents to a more expressive representation of who you are in your many roles as a family member, a friend, a philanthropist, and the artist behind your legacy.

  1. Ethical Wills: Adding Subtle Tones to Standard Documents

Estate planning documents are designed to be clear, legally enforceable, and objective. They are written in precise legal language to ensure that your wishes can be carried out as intended. Ethical wills serve a different (although complementary) purpose. They are personal, nonbinding documents that allow you to share your values, experiences, and perspective with your loved ones, in your own words.

How ethical wills work:

  • Separate from a legal will or trust and carry no legal force
  • Can be written, recorded, or compiled in multiple formats
  • May include life lessons, family history, cultural traditions, or personal reflections
  • Typically shared with family members during life, but may be included with estate planning documents to be shared at death

How ethical wills add color to an estate plan:

  • Explain the values and experiences that shaped your decisions
  • Preserve stories and history that do not appear in formal documents
  • Humanize distributions that may otherwise feel impersonal or confusing to loved ones
  • Give your voice permanence long after you can no longer speak for yourself

While a legal will may control inheritance outcomes, an ethical will provides context, continuity, and connection for your beneficiaries. It does not need to be lengthy or literary. Even a short ethical will, written in your own words, can add warmth, depth, and dimension to an estate plan by helping loved ones understand not just what you decided, but why. You can think of it as mixing standard colors to create a new tone.

  1. Philanthropic Passions: Generous Brushstrokes That Build Shape and Texture

Charitable giving can provide financial benefits, including potential tax advantages. But for most people, its purpose runs deeper: It is an expression of identity, gratitude, and personal beliefs. Philanthropy allows your estate plan to reflect what matters to you beyond your immediate loved ones, including the causes you support, the communities you care about, and the values you hope to encourage for future generations.

How philanthropic planning works:

  • Often incorporated through bequests in a will or a trust
  • May involve charitable trusts, donor-advised funds, or direct gifts
  • Can be structured during life, at death, or across generations
  • Often coordinated with broader financial and tax planning goals

How philanthropy adds color to an estate plan:

  • Translates personal values into lasting impact
  • Tells beneficiaries what you stood for, not just what you owned
  • Creates a sense of continuity between generations
  • Offers a shared purpose that can bring families together

Donations large enough to earn a named building or library wing are beyond most people’s gifting budget. However, even modest charitable provisions can build texture and depth into an estate plan by showing how your values extend beyond the frame of family and finances. They serve as subtle accent colors that draw the eye inward and give a plan dimension.

  1. Sentimental Items: Smaller Strokes That Show Personality

Not everything that matters in an estate plan is measurable in dollars. Personal belongings—jewelry, artwork, letters, heirloom quilts, collections, photo albums, or other meaningful everyday objects—can carry emotional weight that far exceeds their financial value. For example, an old painting that hung above your desk may be coveted by a family member because it reminds them of you, even if it has little financial value. These items help tell stories, reflect relationships, and preserve memories in ways formal documents and financial accounts cannot.

How planning for sentimental items works:

  • Items can be addressed through a personal property memorandum or list referenced in estate planning documents
  • Instructions may be updated over time without changing core estate documents
  • Preferences can account for emotional significance that transcends monetary value
  • Conversations with family can strengthen written guidance to avoid misunderstandings

How sentimental items add color to an estate plan:

  • Highlight relationships and shared history that numbers cannot capture
  • Reduce conflict over sentimental items by clarifying your intentions in advance
  • Keep alive family stories attached to specific objects
  • Allow meaning to live beside ownership
  1. Letters of Intent: Filling in the Fine Details

Whereas an ethical will focuses on values, reflections, and meaning, a letter of intent is practical and instructional. This nonbinding document is designed to guide the people carrying out your estate plan by explaining how certain day-to-day decisions should be implemented. Letters of intent do not change legal outcomes but provide clarity where formal documents must remain intentionally limited and can be especially useful when planning for a beneficiary with special or highly specific needs.

How letters of intent work:

  • Supplement a will or a trust without carrying legal force
  • Share preferences, routines, and expectations that do not belong in formal documents
  • Frequently used to guide executors, trustees, guardians, or caregivers
  • Commonly updated as circumstances, needs, or family dynamics change

How letters of intent add color to an estate plan:

  • Explain the reasoning behind decisions that may otherwise feel opaque
  • Add nuance to instructions that legal documents must keep general
  • Help fiduciaries act with confidence instead of guesswork
  • Express personal priorities that cannot be reduced to legal language

While an ethical will helps tell your story in broad strokes, a letter of intent sharpens the image by layering in detail and direction. This is the fine brushwork carefully overlaid on the broader composition to ensure that what you intended is not only understood but carried out as you envisioned.

  1. Family Conversations: Paint the Full Picture in Words

Even the most thoughtful and vibrant estate plan can appear flat if the people it affects are not part of a bigger discussion that makes the context clear. Family conversations are where your vision becomes visible, giving loved ones insight into your values, priorities, and reasoning before those ideas are filtered through documents, emotions, or assumptions.

How family conversations about your estate plan work:

  • Can take place gradually rather than all at once
  • Focus on values and intentions, not mere dollar amounts
  • Usually include spouses, adult children, fiduciaries, or other key decision-makers
  • May coincide with planning milestones or life transitions

How family conversations add color to an estate plan:

  • Reveal the motivations behind decisions that may otherwise surprise or confuse loved ones
  • Reduce misinterpretation and resentment by setting expectations early
  • Help loved ones see your plan as intentional and not arbitrary
  • Build trust by sharing perspective as well as intended outcomes

You do not need to present a finished masterpiece to start these conversations. Simply sharing rough sketches, such as what matters to you, what you hope to pass on, and what you want to avoid, can bring the bigger picture into focus. Family conversations are the “director’s cut” of your estate plan: the narrative that allows others to see what went into the production.

  1. Incentive Trusts: Guiding the Brush Without Controlling the Hand

Incentive trusts are sometimes misunderstood as tools for control (specifically, “control beyond the grave”). Understood properly, they are tools for guidance that help you shape outcomes by connecting financial support with values you care about (i.e., education, work, service, or responsible stewardship) while still giving beneficiaries room to grow into their own lives and decisions.

How incentive trusts work:

  • Distributions are tied to specific milestones or behaviors
  • Popular incentives include achievement of certain education, employment, caregiving, or community involvement milestones
  • Terms are typically set out in a trust and administered by a trustee
  • Flexibility can be built in to account for changing circumstances

How incentive trusts add color to an estate plan:

  • Reflect what you value in addition to what you want to fund
  • Provide structure without rigid control
  • Encourage engagement, purpose, or responsibility
  • Signal intention that feels less like judgment

When used with a specific heir and their circumstances in mind, incentive trusts can avoid imposing a single vision of success. Instead, they can offer gentle guidance and direction without prescribing every step. In an estate plan, they function like guiding lines beneath the paint. Those just starting out or struggling can benefit from the underlying structure while having some freedom for personal touches.

  1. Living Legacy Projects and Other Ways to Paint an Estate Plan

Every aspect of a legacy does not need to be captured in legal documents or even the nonlegal documents that accompany them. Some of the most meaningful expressions of legacy are created alongside the estate plan rather than inside it. Family legacy projects are a way to preserve stories and experiences that do not neatly fit into formal planning but may matter just as much.

How legacy projects work:

  • Created or co-created during life with family members
  • May exist in digital, written, audio, or visual formats
  • Can be shared informally or referenced in estate planning documents
  • Able to evolve over time; do not have to be completed all at once

Examples include recorded video interviews with family members, digital scrapbooks or photo archives for online sharing, illustrated family trees, or “story maps” that trace ancestors’ migration from other parts of the world. Families may also create music playlists, recipe collections, or written reflections that capture traditions, identity, and special everyday moments that pass quietly between major milestones.

How legacy projects add color to an estate plan:

  • Incorporate voices, stories, and perspectives that legal documents cannot express
  • Create connection across generations that complements asset distributions
  • Invite loved ones to participate in shaping the legacy together
  • Turn memories into something tangible, shareable, and enduring

Newer tools make this kind of preservation even more accessible. Services such as Remento send prompts to loved ones and record their spoken responses as digital keepsakes while others, such as Storyworth, Meminto, Memorygram, and StoryCorps, offer different ways to capture written stories, audio interviews, and multimedia family histories.

Legacy projects can function like an informational placard placed in front of your finished work or a pamphlet visitors take home. They help explain what others are seeing and make the process feel more inclusive. A legacy project may be the last part of your plan, created after the paperwork is signed and filed, but it could have the greatest emotional impact.

If you are feeling like Dorothy stuck in a black-and-white world, we can help you step into Technicolor and express your legacy with your own unmistakable artistic stamp call 617-431-2669 today.