Showing posts with label toppers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label toppers. Show all posts

Saturday, August 18, 2012

Ooh la la!

I made edible toys yesterday. These are cake toppers for a little boy. They're going all the way to France! My fondant sculptures are seeing more of the world than I am... I'm envious. LOL. A friend at work commissioned me to do these for her grandson, Toma's birthday.  Took me all of yesterday to make them. They each started life as a single Kellogg's LCM breakfast bar.

The helicopter is for the birthday boy (see his name on the chopper?), and the pink beetle is for a girl who'll be at the party. I was informed there'll be 4 kids at the birthday bash - 2 boys with blonde wavy hair, a girl with dark curly hair and another boy with dark curly hair; hence, the reason for 4 toys and kids with matching hair.
The blades on the chopper actually spins! Yes, Toma can play with his food! Isn't that every kids' birthday wish?





The trickiest part now is to pack these really well so they survive their trip to France.





Monday, August 6, 2012

How to run your own sweat shop

It's my day off today so I made another 60 puppies, bringing my weekend total to more than 200 fondant puppies. That has got to be a record! Feels like a sweat shop. So, if you feel like running your own sweat shop and make fondant puppies by the masses, follow my instructions...
To fit out my sweat shop, I invested in a sculpting knife, a ball tool, a carving tool, brush, sugar flower glue, silicon chocolate mould, and of course, fondant.
Oh, and don't forget, some black non-pareils...
Step 1: Start with an upturned silicon chocolate mould. As the mould is floppy, I rest it on a plastic lid.
Step 2: Make a whole bunch of puppy arms (refer to my earlier blog on the basics) and perch them on the mould to shape the arms so that when you place them on your cupcakes, the puppies will look like they're hugging the tops of the cakes. I make 24 at a time because that's how many my silicon mould holds.
Step 2: Make 24 oval shaped heads. I'm making a bunch of St Bernard puppies, so I use Bakels chocolate fondant to get a dark brown colour for the heads.
Step 3: Add a small strip of white fondant on each head.
Step 4: Make 24 pairs of ears using the same chocolate fondant.
Step 5: Attach a white fondant muzzle to each puppy head, like this.
Step 6: Make 2 holes on each head for the eyes.
Step 7: Attach the heads to the arms.
Step 8: Attach the ears.
Step 9: Add noses and eyes (this is where the black non-pareils come in handy).
Step 10: And you've finished 24 St Bernard fondant puppies. Much quicker than making each individually.
Some Bull Terriers...

Friday, August 3, 2012

Another 40

Finished another 40 puppies tonight - Malamutes and Bloodhounds. Took me 4 hours, tired now, off to bed!








Saturday, July 14, 2012

Everyone needs some TLC

These 2 cake toppers are my latest commissioned piece from Glenn. He in turn has been commissioned to make 2 "Thank you" cakes from someone who wants to present the cakes to nurses who have looked after his wife when she was sick. The girl in blue represents a caring nurse and the girl in pink represents a patient. These took me 8 continuous hours to make but it was fun. Sorry, no step-by-steps this time. Once I started I just didn't want to stop to take pics! I'm quite pleased with how they turned out so I call this my new "Everyone needs some TLC" range. LOL. 
p/s: inspiration for these came from Willow Tree figurines.




How to make a puppy

These puppy cupcake toppers were a big hit with my RSPCA fundraising last year so I'm going to make them again this year.
1) Start with some gumpaste or fondant. My favourite is Satin Ice coz Buddy Valastro uses it and so does Duff Goodman from Ace of Cakes... haha! No, I use it coz it's got a good easy-to-manage texture and tolerates a fair bit of handling. It's good for beginners coz if you make a mistake you can re-knead it and try again a few times.
2) Okay, a clump of gumpaste or fondant looks like this when taken out of the tub. Needs some kneading to make it more pliable. On cold days you'll need to knead it more than warm days coz the fondant gets hard in the cold.
3) You know you've done enough kneading when the fondant is nice and smooth, like this.
4) Dust your working surface with corn flour. A dusting pouch distributes the cornflour better. I use a Wilton dusting pouch but you can make your own using some stocking material (make sure it's new stockings!). I also use a marble slab which I covered with cling wrap just to keep things tidy.
5) Roll 2 small balls of fondant, making sure they're the same size. Just about everything in sugar art starts with a ball shape. From a ball you can shape just about anything. 
 6) From the above 2 balls, form sausage shapes like these.
 7) Flatten one end of the sausage and using a pair of scissors, make 2 slits.
 8) Round off the edges and form paws. Apply some sugar flower glue (yes, it's edible) and stick the two paws together like this.
 9) Leave the paws on an small upturned sauce bowl to get that curved shape so your puppy will look like it's hanging out of a cupcake.
 10) Stick a tiny bit of dried spaghetti like this. The spaghetti provides support for the head later.
 11) Roll a ball of fondant to make the head. Form into an egg shape.
 12) Stick the head to the paws with sugar glue.
 13) Form another sausage shape.
 14) Wrap the sausage around the face like this and stick with sugar glue.
 15) Pinch some chocolate brown or black fondant and form teardrops. You get teardrops by first making balls, then sharpen one end of each ball by rolling with your fingertips. Once you've got the teardrops, flatten them to make the ears.
 16) Stick the ears to the head with sugar glue. You'll notice I've transferred my puppy to a flower shaping cup - this is so the ears are more visible against a white background instead of the dark bowl I used earlier.
 17) Form another egg shape with chocolate or black fondant and stick on the face to make the nose.
 18) For convenience, I use black non-pareils for the eyes rather than trying to muck around with itsy bits of fondant.
 19) Stick on the eyes with sugar glue.
 20) To make the heart, form a teardrop from red fondant.
 21) Make a slit in the middle of the broad part of the teardrop and shape into a heart.
 22) And there you have it - puppy cupcake topper. Woof, woof!
These are the finished cupcakes I made last year.


Bloggers.com

Bloggers - Meet Millions of Bloggers