Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Buckeye Cake Topper

Soooooo.
Not that I really have a tutorial for this DIY, I just wanted to show off my newest creation.
I was nervous about making this because I have never ever worked with clay before.  I have one of those habits where everything has to be perfect. And, I think these guys come pretty close to being perfect. Especially for me.
I can't wait to display them on our wedding cake! Such a great added touch.

So, without further ado, I give you Mr and Mrs Buckeye!!


He's got his own top hat, complete with a block O, and a super cute little flower on his tux.
She's got a brooch bouquet (mimicking mine with the pops of red and red holder) as well as a veil and a little bling in the back!

Here's some close ups of the Mr.





And, of course, some shots of the Mrs.





I am working on the base for them right now. Not sure if I want to add bling to the base or not. And, if I do, should it be red or white? So many decisions!

I didn't get them right the first time, by the way.  I THOUGHT I had, but when I went to bake them in the oven, I had a little mishap with the Mr. He was too heavy, and fell backwards. I was able to salvage his head, but I had to remake all of the rest of him.
I did snap a few pics of his poor leaning body. Tears were ALMOST shed. But, I held back and just kept going...


I am so so so so so happy with how they turned out! So proud of myself for doing this, and not crying over it. And getting it right on the second try.
And, (giving myself a pat on the back for this)-- I saved over $100 by making this myself!
WOOT!


Here's a few more Mr and Mrs pics...
Enjoy!





Saturday, February 4, 2012

Brooch Bouquet Part 2-- Assembly

So here we go with the step by step for making a brooch bouquet.


Supplies:

24 gauge floral wire
white floral tape
5 bunches of white silk hydrangeas

The first thing you need to do is gather up all of your brooches....
I separated mine by size. I found it easier to work this way, especially when it came time to assemble the bouquet.


The next task is probably the most time consuming. That would be the wiring of each brooch. I did this over a period of about a week. Like I said in my previous post, I read about a lot of gals who complained about the wiring hurting their fingers, so I made sure I only worked until my fingers hurt. When they started, I'd stop and continue later on. I wired a total of 150 brooches and buttons. I didn't use them ALL, but I wired all of them because I wasn't sure which I would be using...

I had to wire the brooches and buttons differently. The brooches, obviously, had pins on the backs. The buttons were a bit different because they either had the one hook or had holes in the button themselves that I would use...

So, the first step is to cut your wire. I did ALL of my wire cutting first. I used 24 gauge silver floral wire. I cut them into strips that were 15 inches long.



Once the wire was cut, I started to wire the brooches. I used two pieces of wire. One on each side of the brooch. If it was a button (like the photo below), I would take two pieces of wire and just make sure it was good and secure. I would wrap the wire around each post of the pin on the brooches. I used needle nose pliers to make sure the wire was nice and tight around each post.



Once you have both pieces of wire secured onto your brooch or button, you need to twist them together to form a stem.



Twist the two pieces of wire together until you have a used the full piece of wire that you have. The one really important thing that you want to remember is that each brooch or button needs to be able to "stand" on its own once it is wired. I made sure that I could hold it about two inches down and it would still stand straight up on the wire.. like the picture below.



The reason you want to do this is because you want the brooches to hold their own when you put them into the bouquet.

The next step is to cover the wire stems with floral tape. This is super easy. My fingers got pretty sticky with the tape. Make sure that when you put the tape onto the wire that it's pretty tight. Just don't put too much pressure onto it because you'll rip the tape.
I chose to use white floral tape since all of my brooches and buttons were crystal or pearl, and the flowers I will be using are white as well.


Start as close to the top of your pin as possible when you are putting the floral tape on.....

And wrap it all the way to the bottom of the stem.


Once you have all of your brooches wired, I recommend you separate them into sizes. I separated mine into three different categories: Small, Medium and Large. The reason for this is because I wanted to make sure I used all of my large ones first, and used the other two sizes as the fillers.

Once they're separated, I bunched together the hydrangeas that I had. I used FIVE stems of white silk hydrangeas. I wanted a BIG bouquet, so that's why I used so many flowers.
Also, make sure you take the leaves off of the stems as well.
Once I had them bunched how I wanted, I tied them together with floral tape and cut down on the stems becuase they were WAY too long..






Now for the fun part!!! Putting your brooches into the bouquet.
This took a lot less time than I thought. I had to take a break at one point, because the bouquet was getting heavy!

The first thing that I did was put all of the large brooches through first. They're obviously the prettiest and the ones you spent the most money on, so they deserve some spotlight. I of course, don't have any pictures of JUST the large brooches.

Once I had all of the large ones in, I took the floral tape and taped the hell out of the wire around the hydrangea stems.  I wanted to make sure they weren't going anywhere. 



Next, use the two smaller size buttons and brooches (and in my case, also hair pins) to fill in all of your holes.
After I had about 20 or so, I would wrap the floral tape around the stem again, and kept doing that until I had the bouquet filled to my satisfaction.

And this, is what I came up with....





In the end, I ended up using approximately 120 brooches and buttons. The pops of red are one of my favorite parts. My most favorite pieces are the *borrowed* brooches that I got from my fiance's mom's best friend, as well as my Brutus head. Special in their own ways.

The last thing that I did was take the huge "stem" and trim all of the floral wire so that it was the same size.




**ignore the paper towel holder for now-- that's gonna be a whole other post**

So there ya have it! I have the bouquet in a vase that I get to admire quite often. The bouquet still catches my eye all the time.
The next step will be the bouquet holder- so stay tuned for my plans on that!!!





Brooch Bouquet- Part 1-- Where to buy your brooches

When I first saw brooch bouquets, I wasn't 100% keen on the idea. I thought they were neat, pretty, but not for me. But, the more and more I saw them, the more and more I started to fall in love with them. And of course, with my love for sparkle, I loved the FULL brooch bouquets. So, I started doing some research to see approximately how much I would have to spend to make my own. In the end, it cost me about $150 for all of my supplies. A bit on the expensive side, yes. But, I have an amazing bouquet that I will not only have for our amazing wedding, but for the rest of my life.
I want to share my adventures with making my bouquet with whoever will read it. I did my own research and looked at a couple of bouquet tutorials, and then just went for it. I think what scared me the most was how some girls talked about how their fingers hurt because of the wiring, or how they had to make and take apart their bouquet three separate times before they had their layout how they wanted it.
Let me tell you- my fingers never hurt. I only put my brooches on ONCE and LOVE LOVE LOVE the way that it looked the first time around. I think it took me approximately 4 hours to complete the entire thing, wiring and all. That was over a matter of days, but doing it little by little was far better than doing it all at once.

So, here we go! My directions for how I made my brooch bouquet.

First thing is first-- I bought approximately 150 brooches, buttons and small pins. I used several sellers on eBay and Etsy. I'm listing them now that way you guys can have a look at who I used, and have confidence that they are great sellers that have great products!

Keep in mind- I set a "maximum" for myself of no more than $4 per brooch. When I found lots and such, I made sure it was worth the money to buy all that was available, and to make sure that I would use them.



This site has A LOT of brooches. Quick shipping and good items



**I liked this seller because they had hair pins and stuff that I used to add pops of color. They are international, so it takes a while to ship, BUT it's paying for the first item and the rest  of the items ship free :-)**




**This sellers has A LOT of pretty brooches for a great price.  They are also international, and the one downfall I saw was that they shipped each item separately. I seriously ordered 16 brooches from them and they came individually packaged. Haha! Really pretty and sparkly though**


This is from Etsy. This seller sells buttons. I liked them because they were great fillers for the bouquet in between the bigger brooches.


Another Etsy shop. They sell smaller rhinestone brooches and buttons. Again, good fillers.