You can now preserve your tattooed skin 'for generations to come'

As creepy as it may sound, there’s now a new service that will remove tattoos from your body after you have died and will send it back to your loved ones.

The National Association for the Preservation of Skin Art (NAPSA) is a non-profit organization that launched in September with the aim at preserving tattoos with chemicals after it’s removed by the funeral home.

“I personally founded NAPSA because I wanted to save my ink for my loved ones and to allow my tattoos to declare who I truly am so others cannot define who I was,” said the Chairman of NAPSA, Charles Hamm, on the organization’s website.

All it takes to become a member of NAPSA is an activation payment of $115 and an annual renewal fee of $60, which will only cover the preservation of one tattoo, Refinery29 reports.

Upon signing up, there’s a “Final Wish Fulfillment Benefit” that needs to be filled out and NAPSA encourages all of its members to notify loved ones about their plans on preserving their ink, according to the nine-step process for how it works on the website.

Once an active member passes away, the person’s “Final Wish Beneficiary” will give NAPSA a notice within 18 hours. NAPSA will then send a “preservation kit” to the funeral home to extract the tattooed skin.

The kit also includes instructions on safely shipping it back to NAPSA, where they will frame it into “beautifully preserved art.”

Loved ones can expect to receive a no longer decomposing piece of skin a few months later and hang it on their walls to “experience your legacy, for generations to come.”