Looking for inspiration for your own Gingerbread house? It takes hours upon hours, pounds and pounds of gingerbread, candy, and royal icing—not to mention a few power tools—to create these intricate gingerbread works of art. Here are all the best projects from readers and professionals alike, so you can steal ideas for your own creations!
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1. Victorian Rowhouse
This gingerbread-reproduction was crafted by a seasoned pro, whose creations take about 50 to 60 hours to complete. The icing shingles are shaped using a ruler and toothpick. The windows are glazed with caramelized sugar panes.
Created by Barry P. of Newfoundland, Canada.
2. The Jordan House
This is the Jordan House, which the builder found images of on the internet to replicate. He wanted to create a project with a Mansard roof.
Created by Jamey C. of Concord, NC.
Another view of the Jordan House
Created by Jamey C. of Concord, NC.
3. Queen Anne-Style Replica
The pieces in this replica of the Carson mansion in Eureka, CA, were shaped using a Skil saw. The mortar and detail work is royal icing, the car and figures are sculpted from fondant, and the windows are molded, transparent gelatin.
Created by Rita and Monte A. of Ringgold, GA.
4. My Old Kentucky Home
This was made using a classic Victorian gingerbread blueprint. Jelly candy rocks make up the chimney, and chocolate fondant with corn starch snow make up the roof. Yellow edible paper creates the glowing windows.
Created by Kenna N. of Louisville, KY.
5. Winter Wonderland Victorian Palace
This intricate gingerbread house took 180 hours to prepare and finish. The windows are made with gelatin.
Created by Stephanie S. of West Palm Beach, FL.
6. Aladdin’s Magical Castle
It took a group effort from an architecture firm to create this massive project.
Created by Gelotte Hommas Architecture & Master Builders Association of King and Snohomish County
7. The Tudor
This totally edible creation was fashioned with a Dremel tool for cutting and edging the pieces. Gelatin sheets make up the window panes and colorful tootsie rolls put through the pasta machine were used for the trim. I added Necco Wafers to the roof for shingles and finished it off with royal icing snow. The yard is surrounded with a candy cane fence.
Created by Sarah C. of Conway, SC.
8. Ice Castle
A Dremel tool helped create the detail work on this gingerbread creation. The icicles and iceberg featured here were all carved using the rotary tool.
Created by Donna R. of Rochester Hills, MI.
9. A Woodland Glen Christmas
The house and stand weigh 397 pounds. The recipe called for 110 eggs, 75 pounds of flour, 2 gallons of molasses, 15 pounds of brown sugar, 23 pounds of royal icing, and 55 pounds of candies. There are edible tunnels, slides, reclining chairs, a motorized carousel, a skating pond, and a working train.
Created by Stephanie S. of West Palm Beach, FL.
10. Swiss Chalet
Utility knives were used to cut roof shingles on this Swiss-chalet-style Bear House, before the pieces were baked, to give the overall piece a more rustic appearance. Wood rasps and X-Acto knives were used to shave away distortion that takes place during baking.
Created by Rebecca R. of Wedding Cake Toppers and Gingerbread.
11. Victorian Row Houses
Made entirely from gingerbread, this row of houses weighs about 80 pounds and measures 28 inches by 18 inches by 18 inches. It took a more than two months to build. The houses feature shiplap and individual pastillage shingles. The windows are gelatin sheets, and the inside figures are made of marzipan. The trees are fondant rolled in granola, then covered in royal icing.
Created by Russ R. of Orinda, CA.
12. Shingle-Style
Royal icing, marzipan, and gum paste to were used to create this scene in a little over two months. A Dremel junior tool attachment helped sand out all the windows and doorframes. The shingles were laid using a ruler and a paring knife, to ensure a consistent size.
Created by Ann B. of Cary, NC.
13. Sugar Castle
This European architecture-inspired creation took over 400 hours to complete. A variety of tools were used for this construction, including X-Acto knives, glue guns, and rulers. The piece features a motorized base which allows the castle to slowly rotate. A hole in the base accommodates wires for the lights in the pulled-sugar-paned windows.
Created by Executive Pastry Chef Jean-Francios H. of the historic Westin St. Francis hotel in San Francisco, CA.
14. Victorian Christmas
This gingerbread house stands four feet tall and is made with 40 pounds of gingerbread and 30 pounds of royal icing.
Created by Eduardo M. of Omaha, NE.
15. Brick House
The front of this house was so big that it had to made in two pieces. This is a replica of a real house seen by the artist in his neighborhood.
Created by Joseph C. of Newtown Square, PA.
16. Peaceful Cottage
This Christmas-themed cottage is made from gingerbread, icing, candy rocks, and ice cream cone pine trees.
Created by Mary E. of Timonium, MD.
17. Peppermint Diner
Made for a charity auction, this project was created using molded forms from aluminum roof flashing and a pop rivet gun. It is lit inside, and the sign on the roof rotates slowly. It is made entirely of gingerbread, fondant, and candy.
Created by Shirley T. of Palm Bay, FL.
18. Painted Lady
This Painted Lady-replica is made of all gingerbread and covered with colored modeling chocolate-siding. The shingles were all handcrafted out of a combination of modeling chocolate and fondant. The red ribbons and green garland trimming were handcrafted out of marzipan.
Created by Patricia D. of New Baltimore, MI.
19. Night Before Christmas Scene
An old-fashioned Christmas scene made from gingerbread, royal icing, and fondant for some of the decorations.
Created by Mary E. of Timonium, MD.
20. Nostalgic New England Church
A church created to remind the artist of childhood Christmases spent in New England. It was constructed with basic gingerbread and covered in royal icing.
Created by Allyson R. of Santa Fe, NM.
21. Buckingham Palace
This project took 5 days to complete and is made entirely of gingerbread and candy.
Created by Glenn Y.
22. Cake Bakery
At her first gingerbread house-making attempt, this crafter used an X-Acto knife to trim the windows, a jigsaw for the base, and a brick impression mat on the walls.
Created by Beverly C. of Grand Junction, CO.
23. Santa Express Train
Santa Claus is coming to town via the Santa Express Train, a fun gingerbread creation that was donated to the Eugene Festival of Tree’s as part of a fundraiser.
Created by Loreta W. of Eugene, OR.
24. Holy Cross Church
Weighing in at 38-pounds and taking almost 200 hours to make, this gingerbread church is 100 percent edible except for the lights inside. Over eight pounds of various candies were used to decorate it.
Created by Thomas W. of Intercession City, FL.
25. Holiday Tree Farm
A gingerbread barn inspired by traditional trips to a Christmas tree farm. The barn sides are rolled and cut with piped gingerbread battens, attached before baking. All of the tiny wreaths, trees, and greenery are made from royal icing. The horse, little girl, and snowman are made from gum paste.
Created by Donna V. of Amelia, OH.
26. Tiki Hut
This creation is completely edible, except for the paper umbrella. It is assembled with royal icing, which hardens quickly. The decorations are made of various candies and molded gingerbread. Look closely to see a gingerbread bartender holding a gummy soda.
Created by Dana V. of Lanoka Harbor, NJ.
27. The Black Pearl
Gingerbread, graham crackers, and pretzels were used to construct this pirate ship and the accompanying dock. To get the murky color of the ship, the icing was mixed with food coloring. Sea creatures, sand, rocks, pirate’s booty, masts, and wheel are all edible. The only non-edible pieces are the sails.
Created by Tina M. of Jersey City, NJ.
28. Wizard of Oz
Inspired by her daughter’s school play, this scene was crafted using a drill, utility knife, and Dremel tool—and then decorated in various types of candies, such as colorful rock candy and Tootsie Rolls. The characters are made of fondant.
Created by Beverly C. of Springfield, IL.
29. ‘Twas the Night Before Christmas
In this clock tower scene, a Chick-o-Stick candle is supporting the height. The balls on the top of the clock are giant gumballs.
Created by Beverly C. of Springfield, IL.
30. St. Andrews
This is a replica of a real house located in Eugene, Oregon. Foam board, an X- Acto knife, a metal ruler, and drafting triangles were used to make the pattern.
Created by Loreta W. of Eugene, OR.
31. Family Tree House
The main components of this tree house are fondant, pretzels, and of course, gingerbread.
Created by Kerry Q. of Worcester, MA.
32. Colonial Hall
For this project, the gingerbread pieces were cut to size before baking. The house is lit from within with a string of 50 lights and is topped with shingles made of cinnamon cereal.
Created by Christopher C. of Cedar Park, TX.
33. Victorian Home
A variety of candy, including candy cigarettes, Tootsie Rolls, and licorice, was used to create the details on this gingerbread house. The shrubs and trees are made of marshmallow.
Created by Alma D. of Vienna, WV.
34. Mr. Twinkles Toy Shop
Fondant, gum paste, and marzipan were used to create the toys and characters. Everything else is made of gingerbread.
Created by Annie B. of Raleigh, NC.
35. Hotel Harrington
This house is a re-creation of a riverside hotel that was torn down in the 1950s to make room for a gas station. To get all the detail, this artist used a band saw, a Dremel tool, and an X-Acto knife.
Created by Rebecca W. of Potsdam, NY.
36. GR Chapel
This gingerbread house was built for a retirement facility and is a model of their building. The landscaping was done mainly in crushed and powdered gingerbread and fondant. The windows panes are linguine.
Created by Annie B. of Raleigh, NC.
37. Gingerbread Castle
Completely edible and standing over three feet tall, this castle is covered with candy mosaics and handmade candy fairies. It’s made from 11 batches of gingerbread, 20 batches of icing, and a lot of candy and cookies.
Created by Sharon F. of Toomsboro, GA.
38. Unreal Replica
This gingerbread house is a replica of the crafter’s own home. It took about two weeks and 80 hours to create. It measures approximately 30 inches long and is 12 inches wide and is entirely edible, including the sugar-pane windows. You can spy Santa’s hat on the top of one of the chimneys. Each of the rooms inside has a decorated Christmas tree.
Created by Kerry H. of Madison, CT.
39. Noah’s Edible Ark
This boat was made from gingerbread covered with a layer of fondant. The animals are molded from fondant and marzipan, and hand painted.
Created by Barbara E. of Edelstein, IL and Mary Jo D. of Westford, MA.
40. Winter Retreat
This snow-covered house has a few unconventional ingredients, including lentils for the front stone steps and Vitamin C tablets for the tiny outdoor lights. The shiny glass-like windows are made from gelatin.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
41. Rusty Masterpiece
This house looks so real that you might forget it’s less than a foot tall and edible. Its builder crafted the white decorative trim using rolled-out fondant and an X-Acto knife, and created the intricate brickwork with a small paintbrush—and a steady hand.
42. Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre
This model was built to scale. The stucco exterior is white royal icing and the timber framing is chocolate fondant. The thatched roof is made of pasta, the gravel is poppy seeds, and the grass is thyme.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
43. Movie Inspired House
This house, based on the movie Up, earned the first place prize in the teen division of the 2010 National Gingerbread Competition. Each character was sculpted from fondant and gum paste. The colorful balloons are pieces of spaghetti topped with jelly beans.
Created by Skyla D. of Asheville, NC.
44. Country Church
Each piece of white fondant siding was carefully cut and glued it to the gingerbread structure with icing. The evergreens are made from royal-icing.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
45. Crooked House
This project is based on the poem “There Was a Crooked Man”. Carefully shaped red fondant on the roof mimics terra cotta shingles and gum paste flowers fill each window’s planter box.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
46. On the Water
The blue fondant shingles of this waterfront house were measured using a ruler to keep them uniform. The chairs and dock are made from gum paste.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
47. Theater
The smooth icing stucco required a small putty knife. Sugar wafers were used as shutters and shredded wheat cereal as a roof.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
48. Brickwork Church
The detailed brick facade was hand painted with royal icing. Dyed fondant was molded to create the smooth dome of the church.
Created by Lilli M. of Black Mountain, NC.
49. Enchanted Tree House
The gum paste fairies in this display have faces drawn on with edible ink. The textured wood was made using chocolate fondant.
Created by Gabriella A. of Easley, SC.
50. Classic Display
Rolled fondant was pressed onto a textured surface to mimic the pattern of siding and shutters. Powdered sugar was dusted over top.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
51. Holiday House
The white siding on this house is made of white icing that was piped on using a small pastry bag tip.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
52. Cute Cottage
The majority of this display’s details are made of brown fondant and white royal icing. The decorative flowers are made from gumpaste, which can be sculpted like clay before it hardens to a porcelainlike state.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
53. Beach Shack
This flower power house features gum paste surfboards, a canoe, and even a visiting sea gull.
Created for the The National Gingerbread House Competition and Display at The Grove Park Inn in Asheville, NC.
54. Gingerbread Mountain Log Cabin
The logs are made of gingerbread, each one rolled by hand and cut with a tiny saw. Royal icing holds them together. The shingles and fence are also gingerbread. The wreaths are gingerbread covered in tiny candies and the shutters are gum paste. The trees are made from ice cream cones rolled in cereal with green icing.
Another view of this detailed gingerbread cabin.
Created by Diana H. of Park City, UT.
55. Home for Christmas
Melted rock candy and a little food coloring were used to make the windows. The rock chimney and under walls are all gingerbread. The Christmas trees are made out of ice cream cones and royal icing with food coloring.
Created by Lucie L. of Dwale, KY.
56. Noah’s Ark
This ark is made with gingerbread, royal icing, and fondant for Noah and the animals. The builder used an X-Acto knife, paint brushes, a ruler, and a level for the challenging design.
Created by Mary E. of Timonium, MD.
57. Gingerbread Mill
This gingerbread mill was inspired by The Wayside Inn Grist Mill in Sudbury, MA, which was built in 1929. Everything is edible except for the base. Gingerbread makes up the main structure, hard candy for the water, chocolate rocks for the siding, sheet gelatin for the windows, red-colored white chocolate for the red accents, gum for the roof, pretzels and pasta for the fencing, fresh herbs for the plants, pasta for the pulley, gum paste for the grinding stones, and Tootsie Rolls for the geese. I used kitchen implements to make a path of shoveled snow and animal tracks in the snow.
Created by Laurel W. of Reno, NV.
58. Mountain Cabin
Another cabin where the logs were made of gingerbread, each one rolled by hand and cut with a tiny saw. The roof is also gingerbread tiles cut and baked at different temperatures for the color. Shutters and porch are made from gum paste and painted. The wreaths are made of gingerbread then covered in tiny candies. The walkway is made of rock candies.”
Created by Diana H. of Park City, UT.
59. The Chapel
This project is covered in a mix of candy bars to look like stones. The white stone trim around windows is made of gum and the stained-glass window is made of Fruit Roll-Ups. Graham crackers make up the roof.
Created by Sandra T. of Cataula, GA.
60. French Normandy Home
This is a replica of the builder’s own house, a French Normandy home. The flag is made of a piece of gum, the roof is Cocoa Pebbles cereal, and walls are made of graham crackers.
Created by Victoria O. of Yonkers, NY.
61. Victorian Splendor
A Dremel tool was used to even up the walls and the pitch on the roof tops. Everything is completely edible except the lights inside and the base that the house sits on.
Created by Cindy M. of Orlando, FL.
62. Santa’s 1930 Model T Ford
This 1930 Model T Ford is equipped with windshield wipers, gear shift, headlights, and horn. Santa, Rudolph, and Ernie Elf are along for the ride. The car, tires, and inside upholstery are made entirely of gingerbread. The toys and figures are made of fondant.
Created by Ann B. of Cary, NC.
63. Notre Dame Gingerbread Cathedral
This gingerbread version of Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris is about 100 pounds and it took about 80 hours to complete. The top of the spire measures over 2 feet long. Hard tack candy was used for the windows and the roof is tiled with Trident Gum.
Created by Tory T. of Canton, OH.
64. Nottoway Plantation
This is a replica of the Nottoway Plantation which is located outside of New Orleans. The gingerbread was cut with the band saw and the windows were carved out with a Dremel tool. Royal frosting helped piece together the whole structure. Over 25 different candies were used to decorate it along with crackers, cookies, and broccoli (for the bushes). The entire house is edible.
Created by Ann W. of New London, WI. See more details of this gingerbread Nottoway Plantation.
65. Sleeping Beauty at The Bayside Gatehouse
This gingerbread project depicts a scene from the fairy tale of Sleeping Beauty, but the castle is a gingerbread replica of a real historical sandstone building. The pattern was constructed from architectural plans created by the artist. The iconography of Sleeping Beauty, the prince, and dragon are based on the classic Disney film. Everything is edible except for the base.
Created by Rebecca W. of Potsdam, NY. See more details of this fairytale-inspired gatehouse.
66. The National Cathedral
The windows are made with Jolly Ranchers so that candles can be lit inside. Pretzel rods were used to build the spires.
Created by Heather V. of Minneapolis, MN.
67. Anton Schneider Cuckoo Clock
Except for the key, this clock is made entirely of gingerbread. The grape leaves were all formed and veined by hand. Two different colors of gingerbread dough were combined to give the clock a wooden look. The gold key is made from gum paste.
Created by Ann B. of Cary, NC.
68. Belle’s Bakery
The bricks were cut from slabs of gingerbread using a pizza wheel and a paring knife. They were baked in batches at different temperatures to achieve color variation. Each brick was applied by hand with royal icing. The roof is made of gum paste and each roof tile was colored and formed by hand. The windows are Isomalt that was melted and hardened on silicone sheets.
Created by Cheryl C. of Heber City, UT.
69. House From the Movie “Up”
This house was constructed from gingerbread, fondant, and marzipan. Gelatin sheets were used for the windows. The balloons are gumballs on thin painted wires.
Created by Russ R. of Orinda, CA.
70. The Wartburg Gingerbread Village
This is a gingerbread village that was custom made by the families of the Girl Scout Troop 1745. The group includes 6- and 7-year-old Brownies who created this for the Wartburg Adult Care Community, a nursing home in Mount Vernon, NY. The village is a replica of the beautiful Wartburg campus buildings.
Created by The Families of the Girl Scout Troop 1745 of Yonkers, NY.
71. Victorian Style
This took 120 working hours over 10 days, 30 pounds of gingerbread, 35 pounds of icing sugar, 1500 gingerbread shingles, 6000 mini marshmallows, 1 teaspoon of real gold flakes, 30 window frames, and 15 poured sugar windows.
Created by Gerhard P. of North Salt Lake, UT.
72. Brownstones & Batali
This scene features a row of brownstones on one side, Mario Batali’s Babbo NYC restaurant on the other side, a flower shop on one end, and Mario’s Italian Wine Merchants on the other end.
Created by Denise J. of Coronado, CA.
73. Carson’s Flour Mill
This took 3 months to create this project out of gingerbread, rolled fondant, noodles, gelatin sheets for the windows, icing, licorice, and gum for the roofs. The water wheel was the most difficult part for the builders, especially making the water flow look as real as possible. The siding pieces were each rolled to exact length and attached with icing.
Created by Marjorie Ann M. of Carmel, IN. See more details of this colorful flour mill.
74. German Christmas Pyramid
Traditional German Christmas Pyramids are a popular German Christmas decoration. It is similar to a carousel with several levels, often depicting Christmas motifs, such as angels or manger scenes. They are typically made of wood. This gingerbread pyramid has 4 levels featuring a nativity scene, a toy train, Santa’s sled pulled by three reindeer, and angels. The ingredients include gingerbread, royal icing, marzipan, fondant, and trimmed lasagna noodles for the propeller blades.
Created by Barbara A. of Florham Park, NJ.
75. Fisherman’s Wharf
It took three months to create this project out of gingerbread, rolled fondant, noodles, gelatin sheets for the windows, icing, licorice, and gum for the roofs.
Created by Marjorie Ann M. of Carmel, IN.
76. Adirondack Chalet
The primary tools used to construct this gingerbread house were a bandsaw an X-Acto knife. For assembly, traditional royal icing was used.
Created by Rebecca W. of Potsdam, NY.
77. Gingerbread Ski Cabin
The builder made this project to resemble the style of the hotel where she works.
Created by Nancy S. of Boca Grande, FL.
78. Over the River and Through the Woods
The horse and sleigh are made from gingerbread, and the harness from red licorice. The folks riding in the sleigh were made from colored gumdrops formed into shapes. The blanket was made from yellow gumdrop rolled thin with a rolling pin. The woman’s hat, hands, and scarf were piped from royal icing. The old fashioned bridge was made with several small pieces of cookies. Frosty, in the front of the gingerbread house itself, has a gumdrop base and was piped with royal icing, then finished with pieces of gumdrops. The house roof was made from gum painted with red food coloring. The trees are gingerbread and decorated with cinnamon candy, icing and pastel bits.
Created by Mary Jane R. of Pittsburgh, PA.
79. Holiday Horse
The horse is made from gingerbread while the mane and tail are made from cooked and dried Ramen noodles. Red licorice strings serve as the reins and we made the area rug from sour strip candies, the saddle from marzipan, and the blocks from graham crackers “stained” with food coloring.
Created by Barbara A. of Florham Park, NJ.
80. Forever Autumn
The tree trunk is made by stacking round gingerbread cookies with royal icing sandwiched between. The limbs are pretzels. The children are made with gumpaste and fondant. The dirt is ground gingerbread and vanilla cookies and the dried grass is shredded wheat.
Created by Amy W. of Rincon, GA.
81. Enchanted Christmas Light
An X-acto knife was used for cutting pieces and scoring the woodgrain into the rowboat and the pilings; a fine sand paper was used for rounding and smoothing both gingerbread and gumpaste; a metal ruler was used for cutting and measuring all of the main pieces as well as the individual bricks, shingles, and stones; a level to make sure the “rock” base was level.
Created by Mary E. of Timonium, MD.
82. Cape Cod in the Fall
The structure is all gingerbread, and piped royal icing is used for the clapboard siding. The roof is bowtie pasta and cereal on the eaves. Marzipan was used to make apples, baskets, and pumpkins. The porch has cinnamon stick columns. The stone work is soup beans and the window “glass” is poured hard candy. Some shrubs are corn flakes and others are Fruity Pebbles.
Created by Joni T. of Cranberry Township, PA.
83. A Christmas Gingerbread Castle
The gingerbread castle pieces are all painted grey with thinned royal icing. It has gumpaste cupolas, royal icing green wreaths, rice paper banners, gingerbread soldiers and their ladies dressed in royal icing attire. The castle is surrounded by a moat and has rock candy rocks in the back.
Created by Mary Beth E. of Hampton, VA.
84. Cosy Gingerbread dCottage
My stone is toffee cooked to be softer than normal so it’s pliable enough to form into realistic-looking stones, then hand painted using food color. Black licorice string was cut repeatedly to make it thin enough to look like leather rope for the chocolate tree’s swing.
Created by Angel A. of Kodak, TN.
85. Gingerbread House on Main Street
A template was made with cardboard, a ruler, and an X-Acto knife. The pieces were decorated with colored royal icing. The little wreaths and jimmies were placed with tweezers. After decorations were set and dry, icing was spread with a knife onto the edges of the pieces, they were pressed together and left to dry.
Created by Jeanne K. of Frederick, MD.
86. Monzu Bistro
Icing gives this mini bistro replica a winter frosting of snow.
Created by Jennifer B. of Green Bay, WI.
87. The Flavel House Museum at Christmas
This is a 100% edible interpretation of the Flavel House Museum located in Astoria, OR. Tools used to create this gingerbread house include a band saw, micro plane, X-acto knives, silicone mats and rollers, and assorted cookie cutters and molds.
Created by Monte A. of Ringgold, GA.
88. Victorian Christmas
Royal icing was used to pipe the house siding, leaves in windows, and trees. Fondant was used to craft the window trim, and figures. An impression mat was used to give the gingerbread fence a stone look.
Created by Giovianni R. of Halifax, PA.
89. Santa’s Workshop
The structure was built with a an X-acto knife, some metal duct pipe, and a ruler. A belt sander was used to make the edges straight and smooth out bumps.
Created by Maria S. of Carmel, IN.
90. Butterscotch and the Bird
Butterscotch is made of dried, carved French bread with icing fur. Everything else is gingerbread, icing, white dough, food coloring and pasta. Outside walls and cardinal are not visible at this photo angle.
Created by Michele W. of Clarkston, MI.
91. The Nutcracker “Sweet”
Red gingerbread dough painted with red food coloring was used for the look of stained wood. The nuts in the bowl, the green bag, head and votive candle were made from molded Rice Krispie treats covered with fondant. The hair is thin rice vermicelli. A Dremel, level, rulers, drill, sanding block, and paint brushes were used to build the Santa nutcracker.
Created by Barbara A. of Florham Park, NJ.
92. Fairy House
The roof is made with airbrushed rice noodles, and then sprinkled with rosemary. The rocks, mushrooms, and lantern are made with a fondant/gum paste mixture. The gnome and frog are made of Rice Krispies treats, and covered with fondant. The lattice fence, and flowers are made of gumpaste. The spice flowers, and weeping willow are made of spaghetti. The hand-painted butterfly is made of fondant. The board is covered with Italian seasoning. A miniature table and chairs with a tea party, complete with cookies, sit inside. A table saw, paint brushes, and an airbrush were used in construction.
Created by Beverly C. of Springfield, IL.
93. Billy and Teddy’s Frosty Adventure
This is a story house about a little boy’s adventure with his best buddy Teddy and his faithful dog. The two set out on a journey on a snowy afternoon. They ended up dreaming at the toy shoppe and having fun in the snow. They created a snow man in front of the toy shoppe and uncovered some of the grass that lay beneath the snow. The snow man received a glove and a scarf before the boys were distracted and and on to the next activity.
Created by Beverly C. of Springfield, IL.
94. Fairport Harbor Historic Lighthouse
This gingerbread Light house is all ginger bread. Roof is made from chewing gum ,the trees are made from ice cream cones with royal icing.
Created by Scott H. of Fairport Harbor, OH.
95. Fairport Harbor Zion Lutheran Church
The gingerbread church is all gingerbread structure, royal icing adhesive, colored frosting accents, candy stained glass windows, Rice Krispie treats substrate covered in green royal icing.
Created by Scott H. of Fairport Harbor, OH.
96. Christmas Cottage by the Coast
This house is crafted from gingerbread panels covered with gum paste row siding, sugar windows, sculpted sugar icicles, individually cut gum paste roof tiles, and royal icing. The sailboat and dock was also made from gum paste.
Created by Beth S. of Troy, OH.
97. Christmas Bakery Display
This is an all edible, all natural display that was made at Whole Foods Market in Dublin, OH. All the buildings, animals and landscape are all natural. The trains and track are not….
Created by Helen L. of Marysville, OH.
98. Gingerbread Castle
This fantastical castle incorporates gingerbread, rice crispy treats, and pieces of chocolate. A wood rasp for beveling corners allows for a snug fit.
Created by Donna R. of Rochester Hills, MI.