After the 2013 Disney Animation film broke just about every record there was to break, many little girls around the world dream of having an Elsa "Frozen" cake for their birthdays, and proud parents everywhere want to give their daughters a treat - but one family got something completely different than what they ordered.
I'm being asked by... everyone, what I think about the recent posts/articles about my Elsa cake and another baker's Elsa...
Posted by McGreevy Cakes on lundi 6 juillet 2015
Little Briana wanted to celebrate her big day with an Elsa "Frozen" cake, so her parents ordered it from her after seeing the perfect one on the website for McGreevey Cakes, a website from Akron, New York, that specializes not only in baking and decorating cakes but also on giving tips about how to do them.
However, according to People Magazine, the Elsa "Frozen" cake was completely different from what had been advertised, as the cake pictured on the website featured a bust of the Disney queen with her famous silver hairdo and icy blue dress, but the cake that arrived fell short and was downright terrifying.
Please note that this has been re-posted out of respect for a request from the family. We hate to lose momentum but it...
Posted by Icing Smiles, Inc. on mardi 7 juillet 2015
The Elsa "Frozen" cake went viral after Redditor OfficialBigHead posted it online under the name "The cake that was ordered and the cake that arrived," and, of course, the Internet went on to do its thing, as people located where the original cake had been made and even the baker who had made the butchered new version.
At the time The Daily Mail reported the Elsa "Frozen" cake, it was only known that the version that went viral hadn't been made by McGreevey Cakes but rather an "unnamed baker," though now it is known that the person behind the dessert was Lisa Randolph-Gant, who stepped forward after McGreevey Cakes addressed the subject through a Facebook post.
In fact, Randolph-Gant made the cake that has gone viral for Icing Smiles, a nonprofit that provides custom celebration cakes for sick children and their families, and it was made "for a really sick little girl."
Now that the Elsa "Frozen" cake has gone viral, Icing Smiles is jumping on the wagon to create more publicity on themselves and their project.