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The 130-year-old Cherry Blossom candy is dead, and this N.L. artist is paying homage to its legacy

Classic as it may be, the Cherry Blossom is a divisive candy. Some love it, some hate it, but the bright yellow packaging emblazoned with a cross-section of the treat is an iconic image. Now, it’s one that Pasadena-based artist Kate Fudge is aiming to immortalize in her work.

The nostalgic candy is being discontinued after 130 years, and one N.L. artist is cashing in on it

A woman with straight blonde hair smiles. She is holding a print of a chocolate candy in a yellow box, framed in a pink frame.
Kate Fudge is an artist based in Pasadena. Her products feature popular Newfoundland and Labrador foods like Carnation milk and Cherry Blossom candies. (Submitted by Kate Fudge)

First it was mustard pickles. Now, another Canadian convenience store staple is flying off the shelves forever: the Cherry Blossom candy, a fruit-filled chocolate dome that one Newfoundland artist is immortalizing in a new project.

The Hershey chocolate treat has been produced in Montreal since 1890, and is normally found by the cash register of rural general stores. The company confirmed it stopped producing the candy this month. 

Classic as it may be, the Cherry Blossom is a divisive candy. Some love it, some hate it, but the bright yellow packaging with its cross-section of the treat is an iconic image -- and it's one that Pasadena artist Kate Fudge is reproducing in her work.

Fudge is an illustrator who sells art depicting Newfoundland and Labrador's favourite treats.

An illustration of a small yellow box of a chocolate candy, with a pink background.
Kate Fudge's illustration of the iconic Cherry Blossom chocolate candy. (Submitted by Kate Fudge)

The candy holds special family memories for her, she told CBC Radio's Weekend AM.

"Twenty-odd years ago my grandfather would bring me to the corner store in Corner Brook, Mr. Wilson's, and he would always pick up two Cherry Blossoms," she said. "One for me and one for him."

Those memories are why Fudge decided to make an illustrated print of the treat. She said it was a big seller when she first started producing it in 2019, but demand has picked up since news broke of the candy's demise.

"Everyone seems to have the same kind of thing, like, their grandparents or their parents loved it," said Fudge.

The artist said customers have been requesting stickers, cards, and other products with the design so they can commemorate that nostalgia. 

Fudge said she plans on stocking up on Cherry Blossoms while she still can.

"I have one here now and I'm gonna freeze it," she said.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Maddie Ryan

Journalist

Maddie Ryan is a reporter and associate producer working with CBC News in St. John's. She is a graduate of the CNA journalism program. Maddie can be reached at madison.ryan@cbc.ca.

With files from Weekend AM

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