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Images for Inspiration

I have a file on my desktop entitled “Images for Inspiration”, a collection of random images I find on my forays around the internet. I thought I’d share just a few of them here. Don’t be surprised if you see one of these translated into cake sometime soon.

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Happy Birthday Wedding Chicks!

If there is such a thing as Karma, I like to think that in my next life, I will be rewarded for all my good deeds by being reborn as Amy Squires, the tall, blond, supermodel-thin founder of The Wedding Chicks. Amy is also honest, open, and very down-to-earth. For someone who is seriously gorgeous, she doesn’t take herself too seriously at all.

The Chicks turned three this year, and they asked me to make their birthday cake. Somehow, thanks to Amy, I didn’t feel pressured at all. Here’s the photo. Happy Birthday Chicks!

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New Class Just Announced!

We have just scheduled a new fondant “fabric” flower class. This is a one-day class that will be held on Sunday, April 17th from 10am to 12pm. For more information, or to register for the class, please visit the CLASSES page of our website: http://ericaobrien.com/classes.html
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Mushroom Cake

Joy Thigpen is a creative director and stylist for events, interiors, editorials, and personal expression. (She also has a really cool logo.) She asked me to create a cake based on this photograph:

So I did:

Mushroom cake
Styling: Joy Thigpen
Production: Once Wed
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Color Palette Design

My mom tells me I’ve always been good with color, and I think she’s probably right. Give me a paint chip and I can pretty much guarantee I can custom color fondant to match. There’s a lot to know about color theory (my mom recommends Stepen Quiller’s Color Choices), but I tend to rely on my instincts.

When I do need help with color, I turn to the online Color Scheme Designer. I use it a lot when I’m creating new designs.

When you first arrive at the site, you see a monochromatic color scheme:

By moving the dot (indicated by the blue arrow below) around the wheel, you can change the base (or primary) color, also called the hue.

If you’re using the color scheme generator for technical purposes, say, for website colors, and need the hex color code, simply click on the color list tab at the bottom of the screen.

Let’s say I am making purple flowers and want to find colors that best compliment it. I can select the compliment, triad, tetrad, analogic, or accented analogic tab.

Complimentary colors are opposite on the color wheel:

Triadic colors are three colors spaced evenly apart on the color wheel:

Analogic colors are next to each other on the color wheel:

I tend to like bold and vibrant (some might say bordering on obnoxious) colors, but if you want a color palette that is darker or brighter, or more or less saturated, click the Adjust Scheme tab at the bottom. Here, the same analogic colors as the color palette above were used, but I adjusted the saturation and brightness:

I hope you find this tool as useful as I do. Please feel free to share any creative applications for it that others may not have thought of. Best of luck!

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Eight Things I Learned the Hard Way

I’ve been decorating cakes for 15 years now and I’ve learned a lot along the way. Here are a few things I wish someone had told me so I didn’t have to find out on my own.

1/ No cake is perfect. I’ve spent countless hours over the years admiring other peoples’ work and wishing mine could be equally perfect. In fact, I once emailed Ron Ben-Isreal, a major celebrity in my world, to tell him how much I admired his flawless work. I was shocked that he wrote back, but even more shocked to learn that he saw many a flaw in his own cakes. The truth is, you can probably spot a flaw if you look closely enough at any cake, and I’d bet the designer could spot many more. Instead of focusing on the flaws, I now try to be objective about my work and view it the way other people would.

2/ Fondant CAN be refrigerated. This was a big one for me. I took my first fondant class at a small cake decorating store in Jackson Heights, NY, in 1999. We were taught that fondant should never ever be refrigerated. One summer several years ago, I drove a cake all the way up to Malibu in the heat. When I got there, the buttercream filling had softened and tried to escape, leaving unsightly horizontal ridges, and allowing the cake to compress, all of which caused the fondant to buckle. It was my first and only complaint from a bride, but I was devastated. I called my friend Melody from Sweet and Saucy Shop to lament my misfortune. It was she who told me that fondant can in fact be refrigerated. I now always refrigerate my cakes, transport them in a commercial cooloer, and have not had a problem since. (Note: Set your fridge to the warmest possible temperature so that the difference between the air temp and fridge temp is reduced. Depending on the weather, your cake might form condensation when you take it out. Be sure to allow time for the condensation to evaporate, and don’t touch it during this time as the fondant is very sticky.)

3/ It’s important to invest in your craft and in yourself. Quality tools make a huge difference and save you a lot of time. Although it may seem like a big investment at the outset, if you calculate all the time you waste with cheap materials, you’ll find that the investment actually saves you money in the long run. I once bought inexpensive fondant that dried out very quickly, spent countless hours trying to work with it, and in the end had to purchase the other, more expensive fondant. I spent more money and wasted more time than I would have had I bought the better fondant right off the bat.

4/ No one knows what the cake looks like in your imagination. In your mind, the cake for your daughter’s third birthday is perfect: the pink a lovely rosey shade, the vertical stripes exactly 1″ wide. When all is said and done, the pink is more like a fuchsia, and you didn’t have time for the stripes. All your guests can see is a beautiful cake with pretty pink roses. They can’t read your mind, so to them, it looks exactly as it was supposed to.

5/ Make every cake like someone is going to see it. Regrettably, I don’t have time to read many blogs, but one day I found myself reading a post on wedding photographer Jasmine Star’s blog. I don’t know if this is what she meant, but this is what I got from it, and it stuck with me: Don’t ever shortchange yourself or your clients. Give them what you would want and expect for yourself. Strive to do your best. Everything you put out there represents you. Make it count.

6/ Use a ribbon cutter for vertical stripes. An inexpensive and indispensable tool that I somehow didn’t know about until two or three years ago. Although there are others on the market, I have found that the FMM Multi-Ribbon Cutter is the best.

7/ You’ll find your style. When I taught high school, by the end of the semester I could identify the handwriting of each of my 150 students. Cake design is like that: everyone has his or her own individual “handwriting”. Early in my career, I tried to emulate every cake artist whose work I admired, but like trying to forge your mom’s signature, it never quite worked. Eventually, I found myself using techniques over and over and applying them in new ways that I had developed, and using colors that I’ve liked since I was a kid. I stopped thinking so much about defining myself as an artist and just sort of let my own style emerge.

8/ Keep learning. All professionals, from doctors to teachers, are expected to stay current with new developments and practices in their field. Jacqueline Butler, of Petalsweet in San Diego, told me that she tries to take a class every year with someone whose work she likes. Classes are a wonderful way to stay current with new trends, learn new techniques, grow as a professional, and meet fellow cake designers. Thanks to Jacqueline, now I too try to take at least one class every year.

Because I am still learning and evolving as an artist, this list is in no way comprehensive. I hope to revisit this list and add to it in the future, but for now, I hope you can benefit from my experiences and mistakes. I have truly grown from them.

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New Class: Fondant Fabric Flowers

I’ve always been inspired by fabric, and I love the fabric flower trend. I developed some signature fondant fabric flower techniques, and will be teaching my original designs in a new one-day class. Students will learn four kinds of fabric flowers, including the rosette seen below.
For more information or to register for the class, please go to our website: ericaobrien.com/classes

Fabric flower pillow by Dwell Studio:

Fabric flower cake:
white, yellow, gray cake

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Noelle’s 8th Jewelry Birthday

My daughter Noelle is the girliest of girls (her ancient-Egyptian themed party of 2009 being a fluke), and for her 8th birthday she wanted a jewelry-themed party. Colors? Pink and purple, of course. Her birthday is in December, so the stores were selling lots of Christmas decorations which doubled easily as jewelry. We decorated the door with ribbon and some Christmas ornaments…I mean earrings.

I decorated the table and backdrop using more jewelry, like the pearl garland (I mean necklace) on the front of the table which I picked up at the 99 Cents Store in the Christmas section. I also filled jewelry boxes with candy bracelets and necklaces, and purchased some pink and purple votive holders.

I’ve been experimenting with sugar recently with moderate success, and I made some edible sugar gems for the cupcake toppers which were made out of fondant and outlined with fondant beading that I made using a small bead mold.

pink and purple edible gems

The cake was white fondant with bows outlined with fondant beading.

When we were kids growing up in Queens, NY, my mom always made treasure hunts for our birthday parties in the park across the street. (Remind me to tell you about the time Alan Schlanger, the neighborhood bully, looted the treasure box.) We always loved the treasure hunts, and now I make one for almost every party. I typed out the clues and hid them all over the house and yard.
Instead of giving out goody bags, I made a bag for each guest and put them in the treasure box.

The kids always take the rules very seriously.

It’s fun watching them run around finding the clues.

Of course finding the treasure is the best part.

No party of mine is complete without some crafts, so I bought a bunch of jewelry boxes and had the kids decorate them with stickers and craft paint (fun but messy), and bought a variety of beads for making necklaces and bracelets.

Some questions you might have are:

1. Who took those incredible photographs?
and
2. Was the party a lot of work?
The answers are:
1. The incredible photographs were taken by Shannon Lee of Shannon Lee Images. I am eternally grateful to her.
2. Yes, I worked my ass off, but it was worth it.

 

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Pastel Mexican-Inspired Wedding

I probably shouldn’t admit this, but when I see a blog post on a wedding, whether it’s a real wedding or a styled shoot, the first thing I look for is the cake. I guess it’s fair to say I’m pretty much obsessed with cake, and since I figure anyone who reads this blog shares my obsession, I focus almost exclusively on cake in my posts. However, I contributed a cake to a shoot for Green Wedding Shoes recently, and everything about it–from the details to the flowers to the models–is just so beautiful, instead of of scrolling down for the cake, I found myself looking at each gorgeous photograph. That said, I’m sharing more pictures than I normally would, but only because they are that good.

Last year, Jenn Campbell from Green Wedding Shoes created an inspiration board for a Cinco de Mayo wedding that incorporates dusty pastels instead of the traditional bright colors.

Jaclyne Breault from Heavenly Blooms contacted Jenn about bringing her inspiration board to life, and created this inspiration board to illustrate some of the other elements she wanted to incorporate.
Jaclyne asked me to design the cake. I really liked the papel picado in the inspiration board, and I recreated it out of fondant using tiny cutters, cake decorating tips and various ruffle and frill cutters. I hand-cut the monogram, and sculpted the succulents out of gumpaste.
Here are some other photos, including the gorgeous model, invitations by Posh Paperie, florals by Heavenly Blooms, styling by Green Wedding Shoes, and photographs by This Modern Romance.


You see? I told you they were good.
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Ruffle Cake

I get a lot of design inspiration from real-world objects. Combine that with my habit of roaming around aimlessly on the Internet and it seems I was destined to stumble across Etsy. I fall in love with lots of things I see there, like this pillow from PillowPallooza. And while most people who fall in love with a pillow think “I must have that!” my first thought is always “I must make that into a cake!” So I did.

Photo courtesy of Ashleigh Taylor Photography.

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