Bought some toys yesterday! (Hand clapping):
Mostly to replace supplies that are getting old but I did get a few new things like a ribbon cutter and embosser and I'm going to try Wilton's pre-made sugarpaste since I'm only going to practicing flowers. Also, on a whim, bought Wilton's last 2 yearbooks I don't have. Replace my foam disk, fondant smoother, and, rolling pin. I think the silicone will work better than the wooden one. Stopped buying petal dust at the metalics because I didn't like the harshness of the other colors. I think I'll get better colors online at www.sugarcraft.com.
I used to make up sugarpaste/gumpaste flowers in advance and dole them out when I felt like it, for free mostly and a few at a time, but I only have about a dozen cakes where they were actually ordered. Springfield wasn't that big of a market for them then and people weren't willing to pay for gumpaste yet. That was 15 years ago. Either that or I simply wasn't tapped into the proper market niche. Maybe a little of both. Nah, it was about being cheap. Every time I read Diary of The Food Whore I see life flash before my eyes. People WANT the best, they just don't want to pay you for your labor. I can't tell you how many times brides have salivated over my flowers, sitting in my kitchen but then balked at pay a $1/stem (a freaking buck a stem) when I have hours, hours as in plural, worth of work in them but then they act like they're being ripped off to have to pay more than the base rate of $1.50 per person slice for the wedding cake. Fifteen years ago, $1.50/person wasn't even expensive for wedding cake and you would have thought I was asking for live organs.
But hey, that was then and this is now and now I get to do it for my own personal fun. The flowers have nothing in them that will go bad so I'll store my projects and use them as I begin to bake for family and friends again (now that I'm out of school and have the time) when I have time. It's a win-win situation.
But I feel the need to stretch my decorator muscles again. I'm happy with the skill I had but I don't want to lose it. I definitely want to expand it. What I did was fine, it was okay as far as I went with it, but okay has never been good enough for me. I want to learn to do it very well, really stretch to see what all I can accomplish if I really set my mind to it, and see where it takes me. I'll probably start out with a couple of basics like roses and some fillers and expand. Dogwood is my favorite. That will definitely be on the list.
So that's the "Oh yay!" part. The "Oh drat!" part is I'm starting a work stretch so it's going to be a couple of weeks before I can start playing with my new toys. Sigh.
Here's a couple of cakes from back then: