Minnie Mouse Cake! Help Asap Please!!!!
Decorating By mellbel25 Updated 14 Dec 2013 , 6:17am by Extra Mile Icin
AHello everyone! So I have a question.
I need to make this Minnie Mouse cake this weekend for a customer and I'm having a little trouble . I have made a Minnie Mouse hat topper out of styrofoam but this time I need to make it out of a cake. I was going to use the soccer ball pan , but I'm also thinking , when I try to stick the fondant ears, won't they be too heavy to stick onto the cake and won't they flop down and ruin the cake?? Any ideas??
Please . Anything would be helpful!!! Thank you everyone!!! [IMG]http://cakecentral.com/content/type/61/id/3143470/width/200/height/400[/IMG]
I make my Minnie head out of Rice Krispie Treatz. But I have used the mini soccer ball pan and did cake also. I am doing one this weekend out of cake. Use thick skewers to attach your ears made from gumpaste. They should not rip or fall out of the cake just make the dowels a little longer than you would for Styrofoam.
Make the ears as much in advance as you can....and use 2 skewers/sticks in each ear to maintain the stability. They shouldn't be too heavy. :)
Flat lolly sticks are an excellent way of supporting big things like ears - either cut out two identical ears & stick them together, sandwiching the lolly stick between them, sticking out of the bottom, to slide into the cake, OR make quite thick ears & slide the stick into the middle of the ear . I also added Tylose powder to the sugarpaste to strengthen it and curved the ears slightly, to give them more stability, as my cake didn't have long to dry either. Hope this helps!
Barbara from https://www.facebook.com/ExtraMileIcing
I'm not really sure what to make of that comment, Leah_s...
Parents of small girls spend a fortune on Disney merchandise and a Minnie Mouse themed party is going to generate even more income to the brand in terms of napkins, plates, cups & other decor. A cake that's been OK'd by the powers that be would be nigh-on impossible to get, so you'd end up with an expensive themed party with no themed cake... Also, I'm confused that you've picked on me specifically, when there are literally hundreds & HUNDREDS of cakes that feature Minnie herself - figures, faces, all the trimmings, in fact and all this is, is a black ball with some non-Disney-regulation ears and a bow stuck on.
Could you let me know exactly what point you were making - I might have got the wrong end of the stick, and please forgive me if I have, but right now I'm feeling very publicly 'got at' and it's not a nice feeling, especially when I was just trying to help fellow decorators with a specific question on how to support floppy bits of fondant!
AExtra mile,
I actually don't think Leah was speaking to you. She was probably talking to the OP and was trying to make a point about copyright laws that's all
AThere are many cakes with copyright characters, your correct but that doesn't necessarily mean it's legal. I'm not trying to be rude, you are free to do whatever you want with your business, the comments aren't meant to be hurtful just informative.
You can look at other posts concerning copyright infringement but basically if you or your customer can obtain the rights it's fine, if you are making a cake for your daughter it's fine, but profiting in any way is an infringement-you can't even post the picture in your portfolio.
Someone correct me if I'm wrong.
Some people just don't know others don't care but companies are cracking down on this, you can get fined for this. I just read an article the other day about Etsy shutting down a store for copying the Harley Davidson brand.
AThe bottom line is that all Disney characters are off limits. It's illegal it really is. It's not a matter of opinion that's just the law. But people do them anyway like SMckinney said. So do it at your own risk. OP there's tons of tutorials on this if you want to proceed
AHello, check out Krazy Kool cake on youtube. There's a great tutorial on Minnie and Mickey hat topper with ears.
Quote by @%username% on %date%
%body%