The coffin set of the singer of Amun Tabakenkhonsu includes an outer coffin – only the box is preserved – an inner coffin, and a false lid. The deceased is depicted with her arms and hands rendered in high relief over the wesekh collar, a stylistic trait allowing the coffin to be dated to the second half of the Twenty-first Dynasty. The open hands, the barely rendered breasts, the earrings, and the blue-painted hair are all iconographical markers of the female gender. The inner coffin is the more richly decorated. Its outer decoration is of great quality. It is laid out in frames with mythological scenes largely derived from, or merely inspired by, Book of the Dead spells. On the bottom of the inside of the box, which contained the mummy of the deceased, is a reassuring image of the sky goddess Nut, placed there almost as if to ideally embrace the deceased. On the head-side is an image of the rising sun, to which the deceased is connected in her journey of rebirth. Careful examination of the inscriptions, the different color used to write the owner's name, and some gaps suggest that these coffins were not custom made for Tabakenkhonsu; rather, they were premade and subsequently adapted for the owner, a common practice at the time.