I sculpt.
I don't decorate.
Every creation begins as a charcoal sketch, then becomes an architectural sculpture in sugar paste. Hand-sculpted in my Parisian atelier.
Every piece begins
as a charcoal sketch.
Never a template.
I don't use moulds. I don't replicate. Every petal, every curve, every tier is shaped by hand from raw sugar paste. It's the only medium that gives me both structural ambition and delicacy.
Sugar paste holds its form in summer heat, at outdoor venues, through the long hours of a destination wedding. It's the reason I can sculpt towering silhouettes that stand without compromise. And the reason no two of my creations are ever identical.
Where it all began.
For nine years in London, I taught myself. Cakes for friends, for family, for every celebration I could find. No formal training. No studio. Just deep curiosity, and an obsession with getting every detail right. That kitchen was my first atelier.
I tried everything. Buttercream, royal icing, fondant figurines, novelty shapes. Most of it I quietly abandoned. What stayed with me was the discipline of clean lines, of restraint, of a single sculpted detail saying more than ten busy ones. London taught me to look at the city itself, the architecture of Mayfair, the floral arrangements at Claridge's, the editorial calm of British wedding magazines, and to translate that quiet refinement into sugar.
The first wedding cake I made was for a close friend. Three tiers, hand piped, sculpted late into the night in a small flat. When I saw it standing on the table the next morning, I knew. This was not a hobby anymore. This was the work I wanted to spend my life on.
The foundations.
I earned my CAP Pâtisserie in the south of France. It anchored the years of self-taught instinct in something solid. French pâtisserie taught me how to think about structure, balance, composition.
The training was demanding, technical, deeply traditional. Tempering, lamination, ganache, génoise, the rigour of weight and temperature, the language of a craft that has been refined in France for centuries. I learned to read a recipe like a piece of architecture, to understand why each gram matters, why patience is part of the technique.
It is also where I made the choice that defines my work today. Sugar paste, exclusively. The south of France gave me the technical vocabulary of French pastry, and the confidence to commit to one medium, one direction, one signature.
Where everything
came together.
Paris is where I opened my own studio, creating bespoke pieces for weddings. Each commission takes weeks. It demands precision, and an intimate understanding of the couple it's for. This is where I belong.
I chose Paris over London for one reason. Paris is the only city where haute couture and haute pâtisserie share the same language. The same obsession with hand work, with proportion, with refusing the easy version. My clients are couples who fly in from New York, San Francisco, Singapore, who choose a French château or a villa in Provence, and who want a cake that belongs to that level of intention.
Each piece begins with a long conversation, then charcoal sketches, then weeks of sculpting in the atelier. I work alone. I deliver and install every cake myself. Nothing leaves the studio that I have not shaped with my own hands.
Why sugar paste,
exclusively.
I am often asked why I refuse buttercream, ganache finishes, fondant shortcuts, anything beyond the one medium I have committed to. The answer is simple. Sugar paste is the only material that gives me both architectural ambition and floral delicacy in the same piece. Nothing else holds a sculpted petal at one millimetre of thickness while also carrying a four-tier silhouette without compromise.
It is also the only medium that survives the realities of a destination wedding. A château terrace in July. An Italian lakeside in August. A Provence garden at thirty degrees. Buttercream collapses, ganache sweats, cream finishes lose their geometry within an hour. Sugar paste holds its line from the moment I install it to the moment it is cut, regardless of heat, humidity, transport, or the long hours between ceremony and dessert.
Working in a single medium is not a limitation. It is a discipline. After years of sculpting only sugar paste, I know how it behaves under my fingers, how it accepts a curve, how thin I can pull a petal before it fractures, how to layer translucent over opaque to give a flower the depth of a real bloom. That intimacy is only possible when you stop spreading yourself across techniques.
Sugar paste, for me, is not a practical choice. It is an artistic one. Every piece I make is the answer to one question. What can I sculpt today that I could not have sculpted last year.
What makes every piece
unmistakably mine.
Sugar Paste Exclusive
My exclusive medium. Holds in summer heat, outdoors, and at destination venues where cream cannot survive. The only material that gives me sculptural lines and edible delicacy in the same piece.
Hand-Sculpted Flowers
Each petal is individually sculpted from wafer paper for ethereal transparency. Hours of work for a single bloom. No moulds, no shortcuts, no two flowers ever identical.
Architectural Height
Structural engineering meets artistry. Towering tiers that stay stable and elegant. My record is eight. Every internal structure is calculated tier by tier, so the silhouette holds from the first photograph to the last slice.
Destination Ready
Paris, Provence, Italian lakes, Kenya. I deliver and install every cake myself, wherever your story takes you. The cake leaves my atelier in my hands, and arrives at your venue in my hands.
The cake, captured.
When I sculpt your cake, my husband Guillaume photographs it. He brings the same precision to his images that I bring to my creations. Two crafts, one day.
Discover Guillaume Gimenez PhotographyTell me about
your day.
I take a limited number of commissions each year to ensure every piece receives my full attention.