Saturday, March 6, 2010

Working on the Wall-E Birthday Party

THE DECORATIONS
Drawing and painting the robots was the most time consuming thing I did for the party. I ended up making 2 Wall-E's, 2 Eve's, MO, Auto, Gopher, 2 Security Bot's, the Axiom, Umbrella bot, Beautician bot and Flash bot. The only reason I was able to draw and paint any of these was because I bought a book about how to draw them. I thought the robots turned out well, but I wasn't able to present them on the wall the way I wanted to. If I had more time I would have drawn some lines to add dimension to the scene.  

I turned the school side of the basement into outer space. It was definitely the coolest room in the house. However, I learned a lot about what sticks to plastic table covers and what doesn't. I found out too late that you have to have special paint for painting plastic after all my stamped paint stars started falling off. I ended up knocking all of them off, flipped the tablecloths around and stamped silver ink stars all over. They stayed on, but if they were touched they smeared. Thankfully no one got too close to the stars and they were small enough so they weren't a problem.

THE PARTY FAVORS
Since this was my second Wall-E birthday party for Ethan I had a few things left over and a couple new ideas. One of my new ideas was making everyone a pot with their intial on it that immulated Wall-E's E symbol.
 

I also decided that I would make family party favor bags. Each family got a Wall-E book, Wall-E Goody Bag, personalized pots protected with Wall-E cupcake liners, a bag of seeds, individual bags of dirt, twinkies and a bag tag made from a picture I copied off the computer, laminated, then wrote the family name on the back.

THE CAKE
The most involved part of the cake was making Wall-E's body parts. Doug was able to get involved in this project and was a huge help. The first thing he did was make the stand that Wall-E's body sat on. I painted it black then wrapped it with silver cake board paper. I used three boxes of cake mix and the scrap pieces were used to put the cube together. I used frosting to glue the pieces together for the cube and I was very surprised it held together.

Wall-E's neck was made out of a plastic dowel and PVC pipe. Doug glued it together with super glue and it worked perfectly. The only thing I questioned was whether I made the dowel to long. The cake was starting to slowly fall forward during the party and I have a feeling it was from the dowel. It's something I'll have to research if I ever feel like I need to use a long one again.

The hands were my biggest fear with making this cake. I had no idea what I was going to do until I started working on them. However, the arms were the easiest part of the project for me. I used two wooden dowels and a foam marshmellow which I found in the foam paper craft section at Micheal's. I made an L shape with the dowels. One dowel went into the cake and the other was for the arm. If I were to do this cake again I would have used glue to secure the foam and dowel together because we had one instance where the dowel came out of the arm and we were trying to put it back into the marshmellow. The next thing I did was glue a thin flat stick to the end of the dowel which extended into the yellow fondant of the arm and then we glued the hand to the tip of the flat stick. Doug made the hand by gluing flat craft sicks together. Once the hand was attached I wrapped the fondant around the hand and wrist and cut a slit between the fingers. 

These are some of the pieces I made. Wall-E's eyes were made out of two foam circles I shaped to look like his eyes. Then, I attached them together with thick toothpicks and wrapped them with fondant. The eyes were the first thing I did and I quickly learned that I needed something between the foam and fondant to hold it together. The only thing I had was a tube of icing and it thankfully worked.


After attaching the head and fondant pieces (his name and solar charge), I decided I needed more detail. So, I took the extra frosting I had from doing the cube to pipe the detail work. After that I attached the arms using extra wooden dowels to support them and the wheels. I was very happy with how it turned out and it was definitely the best cake I've made so far.

2 comments:

  1. My son and I viewed your caked and according to George he feels you have for sure done your best with this cake. Congratulations. I had to produce a Wall-E and Eve cake last year and I wish I had your creativity. Caren and George from Sourth Africa

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  2. Decorations are mind blowing and so is the cake design. Dj party planned by my roommate at one of the affordable event venues was super cool. Drinks and cookies were the best. Dinner crockery was classy and branded. Liked the Italian food very much. Planning for another one after exams.

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