It looks like New York Yankees fans will be stuck drinking beer with a head but no face this season.

Major League Baseball has slammed the brakes on the possibility of fans gazing into the foamy eyes of Aaron Judge and other stars before chugging them into their bellies, telling the team and its concessionaires they cannot imprint images of players into beer foam.

According to a report Wednesday by Newsday, MLB was unaware of the beer-foam prints and said: “We spoke to the club, the club wasn’t aware, either. To the best of our knowledge, they have told them it’s not authorized, to cease doing it.’’

The foamy images were previewed Monday during a media day at Yankee Stadium. But that may have been as far as the experiment goes.

“Our hospitality team took Monday’s event as an opportunity to test the image machine with various Yankees-related logos and photos,” a Yankees spokesman said. “However, the Yankees have no current plans of incorporating this decorative element on concessions items this season.”

On Monday, Blue Point Brewing Co. showed off the new machine that can print images into beer foam.

According to a tweet from The PostGame’s Jeff Eisenband, the faces of Yankees favorites Judge, Gary Sanchez, Giancarlo Stanton and Aroldis Chapman were already loaded into the printing system, with “more to come.”

As you can see, some, um, looked better than others.

The printing is done with a machine from internet-of-things company Ripples Inc., which combines 3-D printing mechanics and inkjet printing technologies. The prints are made in just a few seconds. Ripples started selling machines for printing images in coffee foam a few years ago, and earlier this month unveiled their beer machine.

Blue Point, which is owned by Anheuser Busch InBev BUD, -5.38% , also tweeted logos of Yankees players and Yankee Stadium printed on beer foam.

Both Ripples and Blue Point said they had nothing to do with the printing.

“At certain stations at Yankee Stadium they have a machine that will allow you to put the Yankees players’ faces on the beer,” a Blue Point spokesperson told Newsday. “If MLB and the Yankees have killed it, it’s done.”

This story has been updated with MLB’s response.