A Brooklyn dominatrix drew widespread attention online after “mummifying” one of her submissives to a downtown lamppost in 100-degree heat — before pouring jugs of milk over him.
Fetish professional Sabine Tautou transformed the corner of Spring and Mott streets into an open-air stage for the unusual scene, performing the act with a client on Wednesday.
“He is one of my subs and traveled in from Maryland for a session with me on Thursday. He did the mummification scene to please me,” Tautou, who charges as much as $10,000 for a full-day session, told The Post.
The willing participant stripped to his underwear and socks on the Nolita sidewalk before the petite domme wrapped him tightly in layers of plastic, leaving only a small opening for him to breathe.
Tautou, wearing a minimal bikini top and shorts, then stepped onto a small stool and poured two half-gallon containers of milk over the man’s heat-soaked head.
“He was so happy,” Tautou said of the submissive, who she described as enjoying public humiliation, adding that she made sure he cleaned up afterward and left no trash behind.
The roughly 15-minute spectacle stunned passersby and quickly sparked a wave of confused and astonished reactions across social media.
“In this heat and in this economy?!? That’s wild!,” one Instagram user commented.
Another thought the milk bath was “Better than a cold plunge” for beating the high temps.
“How do I sign up for this?” an intrigued poster asked.
Several more called out the sub for wearing socks. “The socks on is the part that freaks me out about this,” one wrote.
Tautou said she lives for the reactions the mummification elicited.
“Some people are concerned or frightened, some love it, some laugh and want to get involved. But my favorite response is indifference,” she said.
When asked why she chose milk, Tautou quipped, “Everyone needs their daily calcium.”
Tautou said she considers the risqué curbside session public performance art.
“I love the sculptural aspect of mummification. I love the restrictions it imposes on the person being wrapped. It feels like they are less human and more object by the end of it,” she said, adding, that she plans to do more public sessions around the city.
















