Background
Featherstone was born in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1936 and grew up in nearby Berlin.
Featherstone was born in Worcester, Massachusetts in 1936 and grew up in nearby Berlin.
Featherstone resided in Fitchburg, Massachusetts, where he kept 57 plastic flamingos on his front lawn. After graduating from the Worcester Art Museum"s art school, in 1957, he was offered a job designing three-dimensional animals for Union Products, Incorporated. Over his years at Union Products, Featherstone sculpted over 750 different items, the first of which were a girl with a water can and a boy with a dog.
When Featherstone was asked in 1957 to sculpt a duck, he purchased one, which he named Charlie, and later released the bird in Coggshall Park.
Later that year he was asked to carve a flamingo. The now iconic pink flamingo went on sale in 1958, when the color pink was popular.
On June 22, 2015 Featherstone died from Lewy body dementia at the age of 79. Featherstone based his creation on photographs of flamingos from National Geographic, as he was not able to obtain real flamingos to use as models.
As time went on the plastic flamingo became more and more popular.
lieutenant appeared across the country and even as parts of various art exhibits. In 1987, Donald Featherstone inscribed his signature in the original plastic mold. This was apparently to help distinguish between original and "knock-off" Pink Plastic Flamingos.
Featherstone"s signature stayed on the bird until 2001 when it was removed.
The signature was quickly replaced due to a small boycott of the unsigned birds. In November 2006, Union Products closed and production of the flamingo stopped.
Shortly thereafter, a New York company purchased the molds for Featherstone"s flamingos and sub-contracted production to a Fitchburg, Massachusetts company, Cado Products. In 2010, Cado Products (cadocompanycom) purchased the copyrights and plastic molds for the s and continues to manufacture them.
They are generally sold in sets of two—one holding its head erect, nearly three feet (091 m) high, the other bending over as if looking for food.