The Genealogy of Ankhefensekhmet dating to the 22nd/23rd dynasty states that Neferronpet was the son of Ptahemakhet.
A painted papyrus became more widely available to a priest and a scribe like Neferrenpet during the Nineteenth Dynasty.
[4] Beginning in the New Kingdom, the Egyptians customarily placed in their tombs funerary texts taken from the 'Book of the Dead'.
They were etched into tomb walls, inscribed onto papyri and placed in the bandages of the mummy, placed in statues, just to name a few.
The 'Book of the Dead' of the sculptor Neferrenpet dates from c. 1250 BC, and "the texts are written in so-called 'cursive hieroglyphs' in vertical columns; they are accompanied by 'vignettes' (illustrations) which emphasize their magical content".