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I was going to try and do this cake decorating tutorial in one post, but it would be 27,000, 962 miles long and load so slowly for you with all the pictures, that I am going to spread it over several days and do individual tutorials for each decorating step we tried, whether we [...]

I was going to try and do this cake decorating tutorial in one post, but it would be 27,000, 962 miles long
and load so slowly for you with all the pictures, that I am going to spread it over several days and do individual tutorials for each decorating step we tried, whether we used it in the final product or not. I made many varieties of flowers, both for practice and for the actual wedding cake, in the process of learning these techniques. Plus, the Jr. High Youth Group, from our church, recently did a fundraiser to help defray the costs of our upcoming summer mission trip. The fundraiser was a dessert auction (Remind me to tell you about it later. It was an absolutely fabulous and fun way to raise money for a great cause.) My first fondant flowers were used on a couple cakes for that auction.

The two cakes I baked for the dessert auction. I did calla lilies and some little lavender spring flower on one and then did leaves and what reminded me of wild roses, on the second one.

Another view of the cakes for the auction. The fondant flowers on them were my very first attempts. As with each new thing I tried with fondant, I learned that rolling it thinner, produced a much more realistic product.
Let it be said, from the start, that I could never have accomplished these beautiful flowers without some great tools from Wilton. Many were included in the Ultimate Decorating Set, I recently reviewed. Others were part of 
Wilton's Ultimate Decorating Set
My final confession, before showing you the easy steps for creating beautiful fondant roses is that I switched to a different point and shoot camera, recently, and have had terrible problems with my photo quality, in our poorly lit (flourescent) kitchen; so I have to apologize from the outset that these photos are not as clear as I would like. I will be switching back to my Canon Rebel for still shots I share with you AND I have decided that the only realistic way for me to do useful tutorials is to put my video camera on a tripod and have both hands free to work, instead of trying to snap one-handed photos with my left hand.
So, tonight I will use the photos I have to show you some of the ways I have used fondant flowers in the past few weeks and specifically how to create a fondant rose. Then, over this coming weekend, I hope to video the simple steps to create other flower varieties and post those for you, along with the technique for creating lace on the surface of your cakes.
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Tools for making fondant roses.

Fondant petals cut for making a rose.

This cone of fondant is the base of your rose.

Use the edge of the modeling stick and roll down one side of each petal, being careful to keep the end of the stick along the halfway point on the petal. This will create a thin ruffly edge and the other side will still be the original thickness.

A rose petal pressed and ruffled. (I went over the halfway point on that one. It still worked fine.)

Attach each petal to the fondant cone. Place the first petal, point side down, against the cone (which is point side up) and gently press to seal it along the edge where you brushed the water.

Start the second row using the medium petals.
Step 7: Continue working around the flower, attaching each of the 5 medium petals. I used the pointed end of the modeling stick to gently lift petals away from the bud if the were sticking down further than I wanted them and the rounded end of the modeling stick to curl the top edges of petals back a bit.

The center bud with all 5 medium rose petals attached.

A few of my finished fondant roses. I did make one fondant rose for the final wedding cake that sat in the center of the calla lilies.
I won’t get to post the how-to tutorial, until Thursday or Friday, but I wanted to share pictures of the finished product with you, this afternoon. Using some fantastic tools from Wilton, I was able to make our daughter’s wedding cake. It was a beautiful success, fairly simple to complete and helped us keep this [...]
I won’t get to post the how-to tutorial, until Thursday or Friday, but I wanted to share pictures of the finished product with you, this afternoon. Using some fantastic tools from Wilton, I was able to make our daughter’s wedding cake. It was a beautiful success, fairly simple to complete and helped us keep this wedding under our $2000 budget. Yes, we managed a frugal and yet, wonderful wedding at less than 1/10 the national average for weddings. I’ll be sharing some of our tips in a later post. ( If you missed my first two posts with the fantastic white cake recipe and the decorating of the sheet cakes, be sure to check those out, too. ) Be watching for those, and in the meantime, I hope you enjoy these snapshots of the cake I baked for our daughter and son-in-law’s wedding celebration. (Right click your mouse on either photo and select View Image to see the pictures full-size.) We were very fortunate to have such a great photographer, Mary Hubbard, from Breaking the Surface Photography. She creates exceptional photo memories at an affordable price. I highly recommend her services.

The wedding cake I baked and decorated for our daughter's wedding. Photo is published by permission and copyright © Mary Hubbard at Breaking the Surface Photography 2011.
