
These Olympic curling stones were used at the Winter Olympics Milano Cortina 2026, sliding across Olympic ice and helping decide who won gold medals. But what happens to them after the Games are over?
Made from rare Ailsa Craig granite off the west coast of Scotland, these are the only stones approved for use at the Winter Olympic Games and now fans have the chance to own a real piece of Olympic history. I follow the full process inside the curling stone factory, showing exactly how curling stones are made and what’s happening to them after the Winter Olympics 2026.
In this video, I visit Kays of Scotland for a second time, the only company in the world authorised to make Olympic curling stones, to reveal their second life after the Milano Cortino Olympics. From a small Scottish island to the global stage of the Winter Olympics to Olympic memorabilia, this is the full journey of an Olympic curling stone.
Categories: The Evening Post Stuff


