The Fascinating Art of Butter Sculpting

Featured in Ripley's Believe It or Not!


butter sculpting

Butter Sculpting

Every year across North America, state fairs present something mysterious, awe-inspiring, and very fattening: life-sized sculptures made from butter.


butter sculpting


Bald eagles, Elvis Presley, Harley-Davidson motorcycles, and even Da Vinci’s Last Supper have been rendered from coagulated milk fat.


No Margarine for Error

The first butter sculpture in America appeared at a fair in 1876, during America’s centennial. The sculpture had to be kept cool by buckets of ice that were constantly replenished.


butter sculpture


The artist behind the rise of butter portraits was Pamela H. Simpson. After using butter molds as a marketing tactic to sell her farm’s butter, she soon began making a living sculpting portraits of people out of butter. Among her clients was none other than Mary, Queen of Scots.


Udderly Cool

One such uncanny sculpture presented year after year is a cow itself made from the product of its udders. A life-sized cow sculpture requires 600 pounds of butter—which is actually much less than the usual 1,000 plus pounds a real cow weighs.


Source: The Fascinating Art of Butter Sculpting

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Published on November 22, 2017 12:58
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