Bunch of Flowers Cake Pops -
I share these bouquets of flowers easy today ... just in time for Mother's Day.
There are endless opportunities to make cake pops flowers. I am blown away by all the amazing designs that you guys have created and it made my heart happy to see how much fun this site has inspired and how the cake pop designs of all the creative world have become. You can use candies for petals, cutters cookie flowers to shape your dough molds to make attachments to flowers, fondant for details petal flower, you can pipe swirling peaks on roses and even use cupcake wrappers for donors to do most of the decorating. Then you can gift them together for a beautiful bouquet. I bet if you did a search for cake pops flowers, you'd be busy for days about all the different ways to celebrate cake and flowers combined into one cute little pleasure.
Well here's another way that brings together and cute cake. In this design, the cake pop is its own bouquet. Give them a group of atmosphere in pastel colors or simply share individually with a sweet little label and make someone smile ... like mom! These would be very cute baby or bridal showers and weddings with coordinating colors. So many options and the best part is they are easy to decorate.
You will need to make cake pops base. Crumbled cake mixed with frosting and rolled into balls bites.
BASIC HOW-TO HERE.
Then it's time to get to the decor.
First up, dip your stick about two inches into the green candy coating and let dry start. Next, insert the tip dipped halfway into a slightly flattened ball cake.
When dry, dip the uncoated cake ball into melted candy slices in the desired color and let dry. Then, a point more molten coating with a bottle of toothpick or squeeze. I used a toothpick and dotted. These can be of random size and shape.
There is no need for perfection because we're going to swirl over several coatings to resemble petals ... or at least insinuate petals. At this scale, tiny vortices are all you really need. Again, I used a wet toothpick into melted candy coating I made lighter by mixing with white pads. I let it drain coating the toothpick and used the coat that hung to land on pop and swirl in a circular motion to draw. This does make sense. I like to have a live action shot or at least a fourth hand if I could take a picture, but it's easy. Just start playing and you get it. The key is the fluid coating, so that you can make fine lines.
Finally stems, use a wet toothpick in remaining melted slices of green candies to layer on more stems bulk.
Then, if you want a little more detail, apply more random points coating nonpareils and drop on the cake pop on a large flat reuse everything down. Wrap the stems in the ribbon to make them super soft.
If you make cake pops flower, share a link below, I'd love to see what you've done!
I share these bouquets of flowers easy today ... just in time for Mother's Day.
There are endless opportunities to make cake pops flowers. I am blown away by all the amazing designs that you guys have created and it made my heart happy to see how much fun this site has inspired and how the cake pop designs of all the creative world have become. You can use candies for petals, cutters cookie flowers to shape your dough molds to make attachments to flowers, fondant for details petal flower, you can pipe swirling peaks on roses and even use cupcake wrappers for donors to do most of the decorating. Then you can gift them together for a beautiful bouquet. I bet if you did a search for cake pops flowers, you'd be busy for days about all the different ways to celebrate cake and flowers combined into one cute little pleasure.
Well here's another way that brings together and cute cake. In this design, the cake pop is its own bouquet. Give them a group of atmosphere in pastel colors or simply share individually with a sweet little label and make someone smile ... like mom! These would be very cute baby or bridal showers and weddings with coordinating colors. So many options and the best part is they are easy to decorate.
You will need to make cake pops base. Crumbled cake mixed with frosting and rolled into balls bites.
BASIC HOW-TO HERE.
Then it's time to get to the decor.
First up, dip your stick about two inches into the green candy coating and let dry start. Next, insert the tip dipped halfway into a slightly flattened ball cake.
When dry, dip the uncoated cake ball into melted candy slices in the desired color and let dry. Then, a point more molten coating with a bottle of toothpick or squeeze. I used a toothpick and dotted. These can be of random size and shape.
There is no need for perfection because we're going to swirl over several coatings to resemble petals ... or at least insinuate petals. At this scale, tiny vortices are all you really need. Again, I used a wet toothpick into melted candy coating I made lighter by mixing with white pads. I let it drain coating the toothpick and used the coat that hung to land on pop and swirl in a circular motion to draw. This does make sense. I like to have a live action shot or at least a fourth hand if I could take a picture, but it's easy. Just start playing and you get it. The key is the fluid coating, so that you can make fine lines.
Finally stems, use a wet toothpick in remaining melted slices of green candies to layer on more stems bulk.
Then, if you want a little more detail, apply more random points coating nonpareils and drop on the cake pop on a large flat reuse everything down. Wrap the stems in the ribbon to make them super soft.
If you make cake pops flower, share a link below, I'd love to see what you've done!