Thursday, July 14, 2011

Bye Now Cupcakes

One of my best girl friends is moving to Washington and soon after to Oregon for her husband's grad school.  Changes are always sad and hard, but as cupcakes fix most ails, me and anther friend planned a party.




I used a lot of the same techniques on these cupcakes that I used on the Babies! ones from earlier this month.  I am loving fondant decorated cupcakes these days.  And I am loving my rubber stamp.  I need to buy more ASAP.  Hobby Lobby here I come.


To make the word medallions, I cut out the small white circles with a tiny cookie cutter and wrote the messages on then with a size 2 Wilton tip.  (This way, if you mess up, you're only losing a small piece of fondant.)


 Then I cut out the colored circles and stamped them.    


I let them dry over night and then glued them together with some royal icing the next morning.  I used the paint brush to dust off the little bits of powdered sugar you see above.  Be sure to do this AFTER they are hardened!

Okay, those are cute!


For my cupcakes, I made chocolate chip cookie dough ones for the medallions.  I had some left over sweetened condensed milk I wanted to use up.  I was going to dye the icing, but it is SO good and mostly covered up that I didn't want to mess with it.  This icing bag is my 16" coated fabric bag from Ateco.  I LOVE LOVE LOVE IT!  You can frost about 30 cupcakes at a time with that baby!




My other cupcakes are pretty simple.  There are chocolate cupcakes with coconut filling and a blue ball with some white sprinkles.  For these cupcakes I cut the tops and spooned the filling in.  It was awesome.  I think it was a lot easier than injecting them so it might become a thing. You can get more filling in and it can be cold, which does not work with the injecting method.



My other chocolate ones are marshmallow filled and decorated with small white sprinkles and a grey ball.



We decorated our table with some cute things like grey paper straws and blue paper cups.  We made some Turkey Harvest sandwiches and had chips and such.  I think it turned out quite cute.





T-Shirt Tutorial

Those of you who know me know that I love to craft and sew and make stuff.  I love cake the mostest, but this craft was so cake related that I had to include it here.  This is my first ever big tutorial, so bear with me and any advice would be greatly appreciated.


So I have been wanting to make a Cake Optimist t-shirt for a long time.  I looked into custom ordering screen print shirts, but I'm a poor grad student so it never happened.  Then I saw this great tutorial on I am Mama Hear Me Roar http://iammommahearmeroar.blogspot.com/search/label/freezer%20paper%20stenciling.  I quickly got all the stuff and jumped on it.  This is what I ended up with...




If you like video tutorials, please watch hers.  It is awesome.  As I do most of my blog reading during class, I love the picture/text ones so here is mine.


Materials:
t-shirt
design to put on shrit
Xacto knife or other precision knife
freezer paper
tape
board to cut on
cardboard to put inside t-shirt
acrylic paints
fabric paint medium
paint brush
iron
fan


Step 1: 
Assemble your supplies and get ready to live.  I bought my freezer paper at Wal-Mart for about 6 bucks.  It is a HUGE box so share with a friend or make A LOT of t-shirts.  If you live around here, come get some of mine.  I got the t-shirt at Wal-Mart as well.  It was 4 bucks, which I think is pretty good.  The paints I got at Robert's Crafts.  The paint medium is a paint that you add to acrylic paints to make them fabric ready.  I know you can get fabric paints, but I couldn't find them here.  The medium was $1.50 and the paints were about $1 each.  You can get the regular paints at Wal-Mart, which is just cheaper.  I used cake boards for my t-shirt form and I used my quilting board (the one I use with my rotary cutter) to cut on.  The Xacto knife was harder to find than I thought.  I suggest ASKING, which is something I have never been good at.  I ended up buying this set in the tools section at Wal-Mart.  It was $8, but I later found a simple knife at Robert's for about $2, so get one of those if you can.  I made my design using clipart and workart on Microsoft Word and printed it out.  









Step 2:


Take the print out and tape it onto your cutting board.  If you do not have a cutting board, I'm sure you could use a food cutting board or a piece of cardboard.  The clip art was too hard to cut out, so I made it a little simpler and added a "cherry" on top.  SO CUTE.  




Step 3:
Tape some freezer paper over the design you want.  This picture is not very good, but you really can see the design through the paper.  


IMPORTANT: Be sure to put the SHINY side DOWN.  This way the shiny side can get ironed onto the shirt and your words will be the right direction.




Step 4:
Start cutting.  The only trick to this is PATIENCE.  I watched Harry Potter while I was doing it and it was not so bad.  Just remember that the quality of your stencil will determine the quality of your shirt.  Also, try to pick a font that has more straight lines as they are much easier to cut than curved lines.  I picked "georgia" font and it was harder than I expected, but I think it still turned out good.




Step 5:
After you get everything cut out, carefully pull the tape off the stencil and assemble the rest of your supplies.  Throw away the paper, you are done with it.  Get the cardboard inside your t-shirt, spark up your iron, find the right colors of paint, and be excited!  


IMPORTANT:  Hold onto the little pieces to go inside the letters like "O" and "A".  You will iron these in later.




On the left is the fabric painting medium to add to the paint.


Step 6:
Get your shirt as centered at you can on your cardboard.  You can buy special shirt shaped cardboard forms at the craft store.  Center the stencil design on your shirt, SHINY SIDE DOWN.  The freezer paper has plastic coating on one side that you need to make it stick to the shirt.  If you screw this up, you will just get a ruined stencil and a dirty iron so be careful.  Start to iron on the stencil.  Be careful of the little pieces and make sure they are all facing the right direction.  Take your tiny pieces and iron them onto their proper letters, also SHINY side down.  For the ones that are large enough, like for the big "O", I hold the piece with one hand and ironed half of it with the other so it wouldn't move around, then I ironed the whole thing.



You can see when the stencil is sticking.  You don't have to have ALL of the freezer paper stuck down, just around the words like shown.

  
Step 7:
Mix your paint.  For my paints, I needed 2 parts paint to 1 part fabric paint medium.  Follow the directions on your bottle.  I did this on a plastic disposable plate and it was awesome.  Try to find a paint brush with harder bristles.  This one is not and it was a pain.


  
Step 8:
Start to paint!  This part is SO FUN!  Try to brush from the edge of the stencil towards the center so you don't push paint under the stencil.  I didn't do this so well on the red cherry, which you will see later.  Paint one coat on everything and put it in front of a fan.  You could let it dry for a few hours, but I was in a rush, like usual.  With the fan it only takes about a half hour to dry.






Step 9:
Paint at least 2 more coats and let it dry really well between each one.  This picture shows you what it looks like with 2 coats vs 1 coat.  This last picture was with 3 coats.  I think I put 4 on the pink cupcake holder because it was not covering as well.





Step 10:
WAIT, even though it is hard, until it is totally dry.  Then, slowly start to pull the stencil off.  You can see here that the cherry did not turn out perfect.  I got a little bit of red paint under the stencil and you can see it a little on the left side.



Here you can see that the little tiny pieces inside are not coming out.  You will need to take the Xacto knife and the cool little tweezers (these came with my knife set) and pull them out.




Step 11:
LAST ONE!!!  Now, all you have to do is cover the shirt with another piece fabric and give it a good iron.  This "sets" the fabric paint and theoretically allows you to wash it without losing any color.  I have not washed mine yet, but I hope it works!  Now wear your new creation and be happy!





I also made a Harry Potter shirt, in honor of the last and great movie coming out TONIGHT!!!!




Thanks for reading my first ever big tutorial!  Have a nice day!

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Babies!

I am so obsessed with these cupcakes (not to mention that I think I am becoming an insomniac) that I had to blog about them RIGHT NOW!!!!  My friend from school asked me to make them for a baby shower tomorrow and after looking at lots of pictures, we decided on some very cute green and yellow chocolate cupcakes!  I have never done ligit fondant covered cupcakes before and I was glad for the chance.  




I baked some chocolate cupcakes yesterday and molded the fondant things this afternoon so they could dry a bit before I did the assembly.  I got home late from being with friends, but I just was so excited that I had to make up some frosting and put them together tonight.  I think the brown chocolate frosting looks great with the pale green and yellow!  
Mindy - thanks for ordering these!!!!







The most exciting part of these cupcakes was making the BABY letter decorations.  I have been wanting to do this FOREVER, but just never had the guts or something like that.  I bought this rubber stamp thing, I think it is used for stamping paper and stuff.  It is just a thin sheet of rubber.  Mine looks like this and can be bought at Joann's or at http://www.polyclayplay.com/Cart/products/Rubber-Stamps-%252d-Curls.html.  This website is awesome and has lots of other cute patterns.




So I rolled out my fondant pretty thick, made sure it was brushed with a little powdered sugar, then pressed this stamp in.  It covers about 6x4 inches so I then used that area to cut out little scalloped circles using a cookie cutter.  I let these dry on some waxed paper and then wrote on them with white royal icing.  I am in love.







Another equally exciting thing about this project are my new cupcake boxes, as observed above.  They are so secure and sharp looking.  Not to mention totally practical and I even got them cheap in Phoenix.  Yes... I am very excited!