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The wedding is this Saturday. Their colors are blue and yellow, so we are, as well as the florist, using different hues of yellows and blues. Of course the pie on the hay bale will have a heart shape top of crust with the bride and grooms name and a blue ribbon. I will definitely post pics, hopefully this works out...spatulas crossed. lol. Our goal is to have the hay bale looking as tight as Gayl's. Out of some of the hay bale cakes I have seen online, hers definitely takes the cake... sorry, had to say it. I will keep you posted. My bestie and I are working hard on this. We lost a week due to Irene, we were without power for a week, my crucial time for making my flowers, without feeling hurried and pressured. If it wasn't for my pal Susan... we got soooo much done today and because of her talents we are on schedule. :) I have seen several cakes online where people have done saddles and bales, etc... but may be if you did a kinda "country harvest fair" thing with "pies" and "mason jars of lemonade" on a checkered tablecloth over a hay bale and fall leaves, as if they fell from the trees... just a thought. This is a great time of year to get a hay bale at most craft stores if you didn't want to make one out of cake. Sorry I digress... OMG! I just saw your pics. YOU are amazing! I bow down to you. How did you get the wood grain in the flower basket bday cake pic? Is that fondant I want to do a barn floor under the hay bale, I am thinking fondant... suggestions?
Actually, Jan, that was not a good wood grain. It was my first try doing it. I am working on another cake (dummy) this week where I have made another wood grain and it looks unbelievable. My husband is a woodcrafter and when he came home last night and saw the wood, he asked me if I had gotten a piece of wood from his garage for the base. It isn't wood. It is fondant. Here is what I did, and I will post pictures as soon as I get the cake done. I took several long thin rolls of white, yellow, pumpkin color orange, tan and black and rolled them out on a plexiglass 'board' until they were fairly thin. Then I sliced the sheet in 2 or 3 inch strips and turned every other one in the opposite direction and placed them back beside where they were to begin with. Then I rolled and rolled until the fondant covered the entire plexiglass board. I trimmed off all of the excess with a pizza cutter. It looked hideous, but was still streaked like wood grain, or like zebra stripes....until I added the magic potion of brown petal dust mixed with a small amount of Everclear, about one or two tablespoons worth. Vodka would work the same way. Then I used a fan brush and started brushing the 'stain' onto the wood in a long wood grain fashion. Miracle of miracles! The brown/Everclear combination turned that weird mess into the most beautiful wood grain possible! Plus, because Everclear has such a high alcohol content, it dried very quickly. If I think of it tomorrow, I'll try and get a picture taken even though I don't have the project finished. I probably won't post any pictures until later in the evening, though, as my day is pretty full tomorrow. This is a good way to use up left over fondant in odd colors, still keeping in mind that they probably need to be in the yellow, brown tan, family of colors. I probably would not use red, blue or green.
jan daniel said:
The wedding is this Saturday. Their colors are blue and yellow, so we are, as well as the florist, using different hues of yellows and blues. Of course the pie on the hay bale will have a heart shape top of crust with the bride and grooms name and a blue ribbon. I will definitely post pics, hopefully this works out...spatulas crossed. lol. Our goal is to have the hay bale looking as tight as Gayl's. Out of some of the hay bale cakes I have seen online, hers definitely takes the cake... sorry, had to say it. I will keep you posted. My bestie and I are working hard on this. We lost a week due to Irene, we were without power for a week, my crucial time for making my flowers, without feeling hurried and pressured. If it wasn't for my pal Susan... we got soooo much done today and because of her talents we are on schedule. :) I have seen several cakes online where people have done saddles and bales, etc... but may be if you did a kinda "country harvest fair" thing with "pies" and "mason jars of lemonade" on a checkered tablecloth over a hay bale and fall leaves, as if they fell from the trees... just a thought. This is a great time of year to get a hay bale at most craft stores if you didn't want to make one out of cake. Sorry I digress... OMG! I just saw your pics. YOU are amazing! I bow down to you. How did you get the wood grain in the flower basket bday cake pic? Is that fondant I want to do a barn floor under the hay bale, I am thinking fondant... suggestions?
......took several long thin rolls of white, yellow, pumpkin color orange, tan and black and rolled them out on a plexiglass 'board' until they were fairly thin. Then I sliced the sheet in 2 or 3 inch strips and turned every other one in the opposite direction and placed them back beside where they were to begin with. Then I rolled and rolled until the fondant covered the entire plexiglass board. I trimmed off all of the excess with a pizza cutter. It looked hideous, but was still streaked like wood grain, or like zebra stripes....until I added the magic potion.............
that IS the most real looking 'wood' I have seen! Incredi\ble is right!
BUT...........I don't follow the instructions. The part about turning everyother one? Can you make a line sketch to show us? when you get time of course.
not only is the wood increditble your basketweave and the pumpkin are delightfully real looking too:)
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