[1][2] Kirsipuu's creations range from a coin measuring a few centimeters to a sculpture 8 meters (26 ft) long.
Her works employ both realistic and abstract forms, and she uses many materials to realize her ideas.
Examples include the Kaarnakivi (Raven's Stone [et]) memorial to the writer Juhan Jaik in Rõuge (1999), the monument to the 100th anniversary of the Estonia Theater in Tallinn (2006), the Johan Skytte Monument [et] on Toomemägi in Tartu (2006), and the sculpture of a seated musician at the Vanemuine Concert Hall in Tartu (2009).
She also created the sculpture Igavene Üliõpilane Juulius [de] (The Eternal Student Juulius, 2008) located at the Tallinn University of Technology,[10][11] the Stone Bridge Model [et] (2003) located near the Arch Bridge in Tartu, the sculpture Tüdruk linnuga (Girl with a Bird) located in the University of Tartu Botanical Garden (1987; originally in front of the Tartu Student Club [et]),[12] and the Ants Sööt [et] Monument (2015) in Elva.
[17] She created a bronze bust of the poet Robert Burns that stands in the Kirsipuu Garden of the Scottish Club (Estonian: Šoti klubi) in Tallinn's Old Town (2005).
[22] Works for public spaces by Kirsipuu can also be found in Latvia, Austria, and Changchun, China.
Since 2007, she has created several sculptures of well-known Estonian cultural figures such as Matti Milius,[14] Tõnu Aav, Andres Dvinjaninov [et],[14] Ülo Vilimaa, Mark Soosaar, Hardi Volmer,[14] Leonhard Lapin,[14] and Peeter Laurits.