Tuesday 31 January 2012

Thinking about Cakes

Jeni Says:

Lately I have been thinking a lot about cakes. Not so much about the cake, but about the icing, fondant, and decoration. You see, I have two kids with Birthdays in March, and I need to out do the cakes I made them last year.
My problems are as follows:

#1: I have no ideas... at all...
#2: I need something that will top the cakes I made last year.
#3: Lately, I find myself with too many birthdays in March.

Every year, I try to make them the nicest cake yet. The problem with this, is eventually you reach the limit of your cake making abilities. Another problem with this, is eventually you run out of ideas... my children tend to find something they like, and stick with it... forever. For example, Davy likes Dragons and Art. I made him a dragon cake and an art cake, and now I have no idea what to make him next. Fortunately, his birthday isn't until August.
Last year I made Davy this Art themed cake:


I made the bottom layer (the canvas) from cake, squared if off, and iced it with butter cream frosting, then covered it with fondant, and folded the corners like a canvas. Then I "painted" a picture on the canvas. The paint box is made of fondant covered cake, and the paint tubes and  brushes are made from fondant, painted with gel food colouring, and pearl finish. It took about 2 days, to make it.

His cake the year before was a Dragon themed cake. But Davy likes to challenge me, and asked for a Dragon shaped cake, with dragons on it.
Sorry about the pics on this one, the cake making ran a bit longer than expected, and my husband snapped a couple pics quickly before we cut it!




The idea behind this, was to make a dragon shaped island, inhabited by dragons. I sculpted the 'island' with cake, and covered it with rocks and trees. The wings/mountains, are made of sugar cookie pieces, covered in royal icing, with icing sugar sprinkled on the tips for snow. The three dragons living on the island are made of fondant, with painted rice paper wings. I piped the waves around the island, then poured royal icing inside to make the water.

John, my oldest, is going to be 16 this year. His birthday is in March. Last year we took him to the Tim Burton art exhibit in Toronto, as he is a huge fan of Tim Burton's. So for a cake, I took some monsters from one of the sketches we had seen, and made them into this cake:

The main Cake part is, of course, made of cake. The monsters are also made of cake. It was, as I am sure you can imagine... VERY DIFFICULT. I tried out the cake pop recipe a few weeks before, and found it was easily moulded. I shaped the monsters, coated the cake pop with several layers of royal icing, then decorated them with more royal icing. It took about a week. I like the way it turned out, but wouldn't do it again.

The year before John had taken to collecting Top Hats (as he is also a mad hatter fan) so I made him a mad hatter hat. It wasn't the best cake I had ever made, but I have an excuse.... John's birthday is 5 days after my youngest son's birthday, and that year, it was 5 days before my wedding. (note that I made my wedding cake, and did all the baking for the tea buffet, and the desert buffet, baked and decorated 200 wedding cookie favours, arranged my own flowers, and crocheted table toppers for all 30 tables) Cake decorating time was at a minimum that year, but he understood and loved the cake.


I made the cake with thin layers of white and red, as he was also into stripes back then. It didn't want to hold up very well... and I was afraid that it was going to tip as I was decorating it. The card is made of white chocolate, melted, poured on a sheet of wax paper then cut with a hot knife.

A few years before, I made John a dragon cake, this was back before I had made many cakes, and I used a moulded cake pan, and the inspiration for the cake came from the fact that John had asked for a dragon book for his birthday.

I am trying to come up with something new for John's cake this year... but don't know what to make. Of course I ask him and he  does not have any ideas either. Maybe I will surprise him with a plain old round chocolate cake!

Ryan, My youngest, is turning 3 in March. Last year, he was really into froggies, and I made him this froggy cake:



It was pretty easy. Three layers to each tier, with butter cream icing and royal icing for the accents. The froggies and rocks are made with fondant. To make the grass, cat tails, and logs I piped the royal icing onto wax paper, let them get hard, peeled them off, and stood them up in the butter cream. For the logs, I made the ends flat, then the lines for the bark, put a glob of butter cream on the cake, and used it to support the pieces of the logs. It was really a fun cake to make, and didn't take a lot of time.

Ryan's cake the year before (ten days before my wedding) was a little less creative, but I will show the picture anyway:
I rented the cake pan from the bulk barn, and decorated it as shown. It took a surprising amount of time, but turned out pretty good.

Ryan needs a cake this March as well. He wants a dinosaur cake, because he really likes the cartoon "Harry and his bucket full of dinosaurs" on Playhouse Disney. I am still working out the details... but have a little bit of an idea about what I am going to make for him.

I will have to start soon, with the planning stages, if I am going to manage both birthdays, and keep my job! I might have to book a week of holidays,... but stay tuned for the results!

(I will leave off with a few pictures of cakes I made... but not for my children's birthdays.)

This was my first ever attempt at a fondant cake. It wasn't for anything particular... but Julie made this amazing fondant cake with fondant for Halloween, and I had to try it! (Maybe if she has a picture of that cake, she will post it for everyone to see what started it all)

 This one was for my Father in law's birthday, of course he is a Nascar fan... Those logos were the worst thing I have ever done...they took HOURS.. and several tries!

This one was for my own baby shower when Ryan was born. I don't remember how I ended up making the cake for my own shower... but here it is.

Saturday 28 January 2012

Valentine Mug Rugs for Two

Jeni Says:

Somehow I ended up with a day off on a Saturday. Most people would think this is fantastic... but I work on commission in a store that only has sales on the weekends. Good thing for me though.. we had the snow storm of the year today. When I say the Snow storm of the year... I mean the only one we have had this year... but it was pretty bad.
So, even though I had the kids home, I wanted to make sure I did something crafty, and blogged about it. I had to, Julie is getting ahead of me, and people are going to think it is only her blog!
So today I made a valentine version of a cute idea I once found on Martha Stewart's website. I will put the link to the page at the bottom of the blog, because they have great instructions, and I don't want to type them all out, when they are already written.
The original version look like slices of a tree trunk, and make a nice rustic addition to any table setting. I have been meaning to make them for ages. The ones I made, as you can see, are done in Valentine colours. I have also added the heart and initials as they might have been carved in a tree, to give them a nice romantic touch.
To make them, you will need to cut many 1/2 inch strips of felt. I started this morning with a pair of scissors, then headed out into the snow storm to buy myself a rotary cutter and mat (which, buy the way, are amazing totally worth the money). We got stuck behind someone who drove 40km/h the entire way (normally a 15 minute drive, and it took almost an hour) and bought the cutter.
Once the strips are cut, start rolling a white strip very tightly for the centre. Martha Stewart suggests using fabric, or craft glue, but I used a hot glue gun, as the fabric glue didn't seem to hold.
Alternate white and pink strips, making the white strips about twice as wide as the pink.

Keep going until your mat is big enough to hold a coffee or tea cup, and a cookie sized snack. Then add the red. Follow the instructions on Martha Stewart for this, you want it to look like bark.
Once you are done, and your glue is dry, add the design with fabric paint. I put J+S (Jeni and Scott) on one and a heart on the other, but you could do anything you like. I also think this would have been nicer done in red, if I had red paint. 


Tuesday 24 January 2012

Felted Bowl

Julie Says:
I have been looking at the felted nesting bowls all over the internet, on blogs and etsy, and really wanted to give it a try.  I made my first felt bowl last week, washed it, shaped it and I think it turned out pretty awesome!
For anyone who is looking at giving this craft a try, I have included some tips that I couldn’t find online and had to figure out.
First…. the bowl!

I visited our local yarn store, and purchased a red and a white ball of 100% wool.  You can buy wool in different types.  This was not spun into a single strand made of several smaller spun strands.  It is just one string.  I think this makes a difference.  I was looking at several samples in the store, and this variety looks the most “felted”.  Now, also very important… you need a top load washing machine to felt.  Fortunately, i have one.  Apparently, it wont work well at all in a front load.
This bowl is felted twice.  Or, I washed it twice in hot water both times.  Because I wasn’t happy with the results after the first wash, I not only did it again, but I also boiled the kettle and dumped a full kettle of boiling water into the already hot water.  I got a much better result.  I have made 2 bowls since then, and tried the second and third with out boiling water and had to do them 3 times, with boiling water in the third load.  I recommend just trying it in the first load and see if you like the results.  I will be trying this with my next effort. 
I cant give you a pattern, because I didn’t use one myself.  I started with 6 stitches on 4 needles and increased every 2nd stitch for several rounds then every 5th stitch until it was the size I wanted and then continued in a tube until I cast off.  You have to knit a lot longer than you want it, because it shrinks about 30% over all when you felt, but that isn’t even in length and width, it gets a lot shorter than smaller around… keep that in mind. 
This is the “hat” before felting:
soup and bowl 004
soup and bowl 005
It is actually a pretty fun craft, I recommend giving it a try!

Creamy Sweet Potato and Squash Soup

So, first of all, thank you Jeni, for the sarcasm.  Second of all, I finished the soup, and the felted bowl, but didn’t do so hot finishing the tissue holder.  The soup was good, and super easy to make.
First of all, cut three sweet potatoes, one acorn squash, 4 shallots in half and put cut side down on an oiled roasting pan. Toss in 5 cloves of garlic and bake for 45 mins at 350 degrees.
soup and bowl 001
Then, scoop out the potatoes and squash and toss into a pot with 3.5 cups chicken stock along with peeled garlic and shallots. simmer for 30 mins. (looks kinda yucky here…)
soup and bowl 003
Next, scoop out veggies with just enough broth to liquefy in blender, strain everything and return to pot.  Season with salt and pepper… and add 1/2 cup of light cream or milk, bring to boil again.  Serve.  Makes about 6 bowls. 

Friday 20 January 2012

Crocheted Book Marks for Valentine's Day

Jeni Says:

Here is a quick and easy craft for Valentine's Day. I made up a few, and they only took me a few minutes each.
I have attached heart shaped buttons for Valentines Day, but they can be any buttons as decorations to give any day of the year.
I think they are great as an insert for greeting cards.

Pattern:

Round one: Ch 5, join to first ch to make a loop.
Round two: Ch 3, Dc 13 in loop, join with slst to 3rd ch of beg. ch 3.
Round three: Ch 3, Dc in same sp. 2 dc in each dc to end of round. Join with slst to 3rd ch of beg. ch 3.
Round four: Ch 4, skip one dc, sc in next dc. *Ch 3, sk one dc, sc in next dc*. Rep * to *12 rimes. Ch 3, slst in 1st ch of beg. ch 4.
DO NOT CUT
To make tail: ch 60, dc in 3rd ch from hook. 12 dc in same sp. slst in top of first dc. Fasten off.

Things That Actually Got Done Today

Jeni Says:
I also have one whole day off in a row this week! ... But it isn't today...
I worked the 1pm to 9pm shift today, so I didnt have high hopes for getting alot done. I didn't bother to write a list, but, since Julie wrote one, I will too!

Things I did Today:

1. Got out of bed
2. Drank Coffee
3. One load of laundry (not a great feat, considering there are 4 more where it came from)
4. Wasted about 2 hours of Julie's day, talking to her on the phone about nothing.
5. Wrote about 2 pages of my next book.
6. Crocheted one book mark
7. Wished I had some left over beef vegetable soup from dinner last night, while I packed a sandwich for my lunch at work.Got ready and went to work.
8. Sold absolutely nothing.... (have I mentioned that I work on commission)
9. Came home.

Things to do today:

Julie Says:

I have one whole day off in a row this week!  Generally this means that i will start several projects, finish none and leave a big mess for my next day off.  Today, however, I am determined to get some stuff done.  Here is the list:

1. I am making a sweet potato, squash and garlic cream soup.  I hope it is yummy… I haven’t made it before.

2. I started embroidering a little felt tissue holder last night, and plan to finish it off today.

3. This morning while I was in town, I stopped at the wool store and got a ball of red and a ball of white 100% wool for felting.  I am going to make and felt at least one little bowl today.  This is a trial. 

4. I also picked up a big bag of peaches, and I am going to try to squeeze a peach pie into the mix…. this might be pushing it.

I got all my shopping done this morning, got a load of laundry on and made my rounds in the blogging world.  Now its noon, and I have to pick the kids up at 3!

Ready…. Set…. Go!

Thursday 19 January 2012

Quick Beef Vegetable Soup

Jeni says:

I just thought I would log in and quickly add a recipe, so we would have something on our recipes page.
This beef vegetable soup recipe is one of my favourites, because it tastes great... but also because it is so quick and easy to make. It is kind of cheating... but you can count it as homemade, and no one will ever know.
I made it for dinner tonight. I was scheduled to work the 1pm to 9pm shift, but we have a pretty big snow storm in our area today, and everyone who lived out of town was sent home early. So I got in at around 6, and put on a pot of soup for dinner. It is nice to have a nice warm pot of soup on a cold snowy night!

Here is the recipe:

1 carton of Campbell's Beef Broth
1 large can of diced tomatoes
1 medium sized steak, cut into pieces
                      -or-
1/2 pound ground beef, rolled into small meatballs
about 1 cup diced vegetables (what ever you have in the fridge)
1tbsp steakhouse pepper spice mix from Clubhouse (or your favourite brand)

Just mix it together, boil until vegetables are tender, and serve.

SNOW!

 Julie Says:
I just wanted to share a picture of the yard today. We have gotten soooooo much snooooow this week, and they are calling for another 15 cm tonight. I think its a good night for staying in and drinking tea!
I think they are even getting some at Jeni’s house today, and they usually don’t have a lot!
snow 001
                                                       

Thinking of Valentines Day

Julie Says:

The other day I stitched these cute teabag characters snuggling with their strings wrapped around each other.  I intended to use them as part of a patchwork tea bag wallet.  I found some really cute teabag wallets on several blogs and thought it was a great idea.  However, I misjudged some measurements ended up with a bit of a mess.... well not really a mess, but not what I intended either.  So, now I have to rip some seams and do some touch ups.  I thought I would share the embroidery with you in the mean time, as it is cute for Valentines Day coming up.  :)
Also, while I had the needle threaded, I did a little doodling....

Saturday 14 January 2012

Boy.... What a week!

Jeni says:
So, I decided to take up blogging the same time as I started into several other projects!
I am working on a new website for my inlaws Campground. The old one is ancient, and really needed updating. It isnt finished yet, nor is it online yet, but I will be sure to post the link once we get it up and running. Hopefully it will be good to go by the end of the winter, and ready for when the campground to open in the spring.
I also volunteer for the Cobourg Museum Foundation, and am helping to plan and open the Sifton Cook Herritage Center this spring. We have had quite alot of things come up latley that need attention, as we are comming closer to the Grand Opening in June, and still have piles to do. I won't go into too much detail, because I am sure I will write about it again as things progress...
Now, I did mannage to sneak in something crafty... I got the opportunity to make some doll clothes. My boss's daughter got a new American Girl Doll for Christmas, and she wanted some new clothes for it. So I spent my day off sewing a very cute doll jacket, hat and boots, all trimmed with pink pom-poms. I delivered them the other day, and today I got a card from Kailey to thank me for the outfit. It was cute, and I am a little suspicious that she spent as long on making the card, as I did making the outfit! I scanned the card to share it here.



I am not sure what is up next for me... I have opened an etsy shop, and am looking for great ideas to fill it up!

Friday 13 January 2012

The finished hat

For some reason, I can not take a decient picture of this hat.  Its hard to see the texture.  But, this is Jamies hat completed.  I will try to get a picture of it on his head and see it that helps. 

Thursday 5 January 2012

Still with the knitting……

Julie Says:

Well, I finally finished Jamie’s socks.  For everyone who doesn’t know, they were the last pair in a long line of Christmas socks.  I have knit way too many socks lately.  So, of course, the first project I start after all those socks… more socks! I couldn’t help it.  I found some really nice yarn, by Kraemer Yarns, its a cotton/acrylic/nylon fingering weight yarn, in a nice brown and a cream color. Anyway, it just looked like a pair of socks.  They are taking a long time, this is the first pair of socks I have knit with actual sock yarn and teeny tiny needles. 

socks1(very dark pic of socks in progress from my blackberry)

In the mean time, I had finished Jamie’s socks yesterday, and started a hat.  I let him pick the pattern on www.ravelry.com.  It is a top down pattern, and looks like it will be a nice hat, but is currently a big tangled mess on the needles.  To start with I didn’t have a circular needle in the right size so I am using 4 DPN’s, which barely hold the stitches.  They are bursting at the ends. 

http://www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/quest-for-a-man

imageThis is a pic of the hat from the pattern… I will post mine when I finish it… lets see if they look the same! See link above to get the pattern for free from Ravelry.com.

I can’t help but think, when I am starting a new pattern (which I hardly ever use, by the way) that knitting with a pattern is a lot like getting a new set of Lego.  You have a complicated bunch of instructions that have you building bits of things that you don’t know yet how will fit together, but blindly build anyway, until eventually the whole thing starts to look like something.  But with knitting, you don’t get all your pieces in pre-sorted baggies… you get a couple pairs of chopsticks and a ball of string and have to make your own. 

I guess this is why I knit so many socks, I don’t need a pattern for socks!

Monday 2 January 2012

Quick Gift Idea: Family Portrait

Jeni says:


This year, my husband, kids, inlaws and I went to Flordia for Christmas. We spent the better part of the year planning the trip, and went for 11 days, returning on the 23rd of December. During the planning stages, my mother in law asked me to design 'group t-shirts' for us to wear in Disney World. So I came up with this design. It is very easy to make, and can be used in numerous ways. You dont have to be an artist to draw it out, and you dont have to be crafty to get the design onto the shirt. Just follow these steps below and you will be finished in no time.
I have two examples you can look at to draw from, or make up your own people designs. We wore our Christmas shirts on the Disney Cruise ship, and the Mickey Mouse shirts to Disney world, and got piles of complements on both sets.


I also printed out the Christmas design, and framed it for my Inlaws for Christmas. There are alot of things you can do with this idea. You can do birthday party shirts for kids parties, wedding party shirts for wedding showers, group tshirts for vacations, or frame them for gifts. How about a wedding party drawn in thier wedding colors and framed into a wide matted frame for guests at a wedding to sign? or a group drawing for a retiring co-worker?

Our Photo as we boarded the ship!

How to:

1. Start with an 8x10 sheet of printer paper. If your design is bigger than this, it will not fit on the kids size shirts. Lay the paper horizontally, and draw a line with a ruler about 2 inches from the bottom of the page.
2. Measure the height of each person and draw a line where the top of each head should be.The adults should be the same height, to indicate they are adults. Children`s heights should be drawn according to age, not actual height. Babies will be smallest, then toddlers/preschoolers, then children under ten, and children over ten.
3. Draw the heads as a circle shape, and should take up 1/3 of the allotted space. Next draw in the boddies in a rectangular shape, branching off the bottom of the head. Arms and legs are sticks with a small loop to indicate hands and feet.
4. Once the heights and base shapes are finishes, lightly sketch over to add the faces, hair, and clothing. The simpler you make these, the neater your design will be. You can dress your characters up for a special occassion, as I have done with the Christmas shirt, or try to reflect each person's style.  Just remember, it doesnt have to be perfect... it is suppose to look like a child drew it!
5. When you are happy with your design, trace over the final lines with a black marker. Then cover the page with another sheet of paper, and trace the entire design onto the new sheet. This will give you a nice clean copy with no eraser marks or pencil lines.
6. Add the lettering. Do it free hand if you have neat printing... but I opened a word document, chose a font I liked, typed out my wording, and traced it onto my final copy. Remember to label each person with their name.
7. You have three options on this step:
                    a) color the picture with markers or crayons.
                    b) scan the picture, open the file in photoshop (or your paint program) and color the                    picture with the fill tool.
                    c) leave the design black and white and let the kids color it with fabric markers.
8. Flip the design to the mirror immage. I did it on photoshop but most photo programs will let you do this, as will alot of printers. You have to do this, or your transfer will print backward on your shirt.
9. Print the design onto the iron on transfers. Then follow the instructions on the transfer package.

Sunday 1 January 2012

Welcome and Hello!''

I (Jeni) would also like to welcome you to our blog! Our goal here, aside from keeping up with each other, is to post some of the things we make and do for others to share. We hope that very soon Clean Cup, Move Down will be overflowing with recipes, craft projects, patterns, and great ideas for you to share.
We will do our best to keep up with posting, but keep in mind that before we post anything.... we have to make it, and we both work full time jobs, and between us we have enough children to make up our own baseball team. So bear with us, and we will get the bugs worked out.
Now, before I have to run and put my 2 year-old back to bed (again), I would like to explain the inspiration behind our title: Clean Cup, Move Down. As you will come to realise, if you follow us for very long at all, both Julie and I are very good at coming up with fantastic ideas, but like the Mad Hatter quickly tires of one cup of tea, and moves onto the next, we are quick to move on to our next project! So be sure to come back often, because you don't want to miss anything!

Hello and Welcome!

Welcome to the first post on Clean Cup, Move Down; a blog about all the crafty things we share.  "We" are Jeni and Julie.  We are identical twins, living several hours apart, but sharing all the same hobbies and interests via facebook, skype, text message, good old fashioned telephone calls, ... and now, by working together on this blog!

I (Julie) knit, Jeni crochets, we sew, and paint, and bake, and craft and create some weird, but creative, contraptions.  We welcome you to share them with us, as we share them with each other!