Friday, September 11, 2009

Roses, Roses, Roses

I've been wanting to master the gumpaste rose and figured it was a good time to conquer my fear. I've attempted the roses as seen in the Tonedna videos on youtube, but was never fully successful. Actually, I never even finished one before because I always got too frustrated. So, I decided to take the easy route and take a stab at the "Duff Rose"! (Duff Rose: Easy-Peasy rose that Duff Goldman mastered.)

Here were my first attempts:

duff rose thick thin

The rose on the left was bit too thick so I rolled my gumpaste thinner and tried again (rose on the right). It was better, but I wasn't too thrilled with the over all outcome.

I figured to really get over my fear and try a REAL rose. Here they are:

1st real rose 2nd real rose

Again, rose on the left: too thick. Rolled my gumpaste out thinner and got the rose on the right. Pretty darn good! These were the first full real roses I've done and I was stoked! So, I figured I'd give it a go again today. These were the results:

blue roses 9.11.09

YAY! I finally conquered my fears and came out on top! I actually timed myself: 14 minutes from rolling out my gumpaste (super thin!) the adjusting the last petal. Slow, but I'll get there. I'm sure of it! Oh, and here's the same blue flowers dusted with some "Peacock" luster dust:

dusted blue roses

Lessons Learned:
1) Face your fears and fight them!

Such a Lady!

I was watching the t.v. show "Amazing Wedding Cakes" and one of the bakeries featured a cake inspired by the movie "My Fair Lady". I then took their cake to inspire my cake! Inspiration makes the world go 'round, don'tcha know?
Here's the final outcome:

my fair lady 09

And here's a close-up of the bow:

fixed bow

I'm not exactly thrilled with how this came out, but it was a good practice cake. It was done in a buttercream. I waited for it to crust then I used the Viva paper towel method of smoothing.

The bow took a little while, which was my first obstacle. The black strips are actually separate pieces of gumpaste that were colored black, then applied to the bow. The gumpaste didn't take the black well, so I painted over them. Of course, my shaky hands got the better of me and made a mess all over the pretty white of the bow, but I figured out how to clean it up (for the most part).

The string work was also good practice. For the most part it went well, of course I had some breakage, but that's common. One of my biggest problems was that it didn't line up well in the back. I tried using the Garland Marker by Wilton, but those lines didn't match up in the back, so I winged it and was stuck with the Marker holes. Oh, well. Then my royal icing didn't take the black like the gumpaste. So, I painted over those strings, but we all know how well that works for me!

The gumpaste balls on the bottom were airbrushed with a pearl luster dust so they gave off the look of actual pearls.

If you don't look too close at it, it's a pretty good cake for a newbie! But, of course, I do look closely at it, and I'm not too impressed, but I'm getting there!

Lessons Learned:
1) Line up garland marks before actually marking on the cake.
2) Learn how to color gumpaste and icing black and/or get a less shaky hand!

Thanks for reading!