Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts

Monday, September 20, 2010

Meg + Will's Wedding



Okay, okay, so I know I said I was going to post up all these wonderful pictures of France, but man, I got lazy in trying to sort through edit them all. You know when you have a huge pile of work you need to go through, and it just seems so daunting so you just procrastinate (which of course, makes everything worse...). In the meantime I've been wanting to show you all some other stuff I've been up to since France, but of course, being the perfectionist that I am, I wanted everything to be in perfect, chronological order so it made sense, but then everything keeps getting pushed back.... and back... and back..........

Well, bah! France posts are just gonna have to take a back seat for now, 'cause I'm moving on. Seriously, I must, otherwise I feel as if my blog is going to wither away again. I'll come back to France here and there, though.



Alrighty! So a couple weeks back I worked on a wedding project for Meghann and Will which was a lot of fun. While Will is from here, Meg's from the Big Apple, so they had this cool "NY-meets-Canada" theme going on. And can I just say here that I was so happy to work with their colour of RED? Whoo!!! It's such a refreshing change from all those pale, pastel girly colours that most weddings use.



So this wedding was also tres cool because I got the chance to integrate some 3D decor elements into the usual stationery design. I combined a floral centerpiece into the seating card display which I thought would have a great "wow" factor.




There's a ravine in my backyard, which is where I found the branches I would need. James helped me to cut them down to size and spray paint them black. We ended up using a whole can of spray paint, even though there was barely any surface area to cover (this was also my first time spraying, and boy... does it smell like TOXIC. phew!!)



To hold the actual seating cards, I got four black box picture frames from Ikea and removed the glass. Originally I was going to have little tent cards, but I didn't have enough space in the frames to hold 130 cards total, so after a bit of brainstorming, I got the idea to use an accordian fold to prop up the cards instead.



I wanted to have crystal jewels strung and hung down from the branches (so they would shimmer in the light), but the only ones I could find sold in bulk at the craft store were those cheap, plastic looking ones. So I veto-ed that and made a last-minute decision and go with adding some tiny white blossoms to the branches instead.






The wedding was to be held at a museum in Ottawa, and being unable to attend, Nancy (the groom's sis) and Joe swung by my place to pick everything up. I set up the whole sha-bang in my kitchen so they would see what it should look like, and took pics to email as well. And while I'm pretty sure I looked like a sleep-deprived, half-dead zombie when it was done, I was SO psyched to see it all put together. Yay!! I thought the branches turned out particularly nice. I mean, even without the white flowers and the tulle it looked quite nice - so nice in fact that I went out and bought the exact same vase again so I could make it again and decorate my room. :)

Monday, June 7, 2010

Hot dog, anyone?



From TheDieline.com: Designed by Bangkok based Subconscious: "TrueCoffee, the coffee shop that serves coffee and bakery with hi-speed Internet in cozy and modern atmosphere, expanded their food range to a quick bite like hot dog. They wanted hot dog packaging that would attract teenagers. We reinterpreted the word ‘hot dog’ and created a lovely dachshund character. Its unique characteristic was that it’s hot all the time."

:D :D !! Love it!!

Friday, May 28, 2010

The Wedding Cake: Part 2

Photobucket

Thank goodness for afternoon weddings. On the morning of, we woke up at 9am to get ready as the ceremony was set to start at 1pm. As Martha Stewart would say, that's a good thing - considering the fact that we hit the hay the night before around 3am. Unfortunately, I was still churning the thoughts of worry throughout the night. What if the cake flops in the car? How exactly am I going to pipe this thing? What if I screwed up? What if the cake starts melting uncontrollably and it ends up as a giant cake puddle that everyone will have to eat with a spoon? What if... um, well, you can imagine how wired I felt when it was time to get up.

Photobucket

For that morning however, I had some other things to think about besides my awaiting-cake and my dark circles - there was the matter of the pom poms. Yes, that's right. Fluffy, poofy, scrunchy pom poms, all lovingly handmade by Mike (another fellow designerd), James, and yours truly. After several hours of folding, cutting, tying, and poofing while watching the Ellen show, we managed to make two garbage bags full of different sized pom poms that were requested to put up as decorations on site a.k.a the morning of. So as I rushed out the door with garbage bags in hand, cake on my lap, and praying that we don't make a sharp turn, I'm thinking that we probably should've seen the ceremony site beforehand to know what the heck our game plan was going to be. Alas, I think they turned out quite nice in the end, no?

Photobucket
Photobucket

Their church, by the way, was really gorgeous. Exposed grey brick with wooden beam ceilings, and brilliant pendant lamps hanging scattered across the sanctuary. It was a beautiful setting fit for a beautiful bride, and as Jess walked in to meet her groom, she looked stunning. Jess is the first of my friends in my age group to get married, so it was pretty dang exciting to watch. I think I was just grinning the whole time, she looked sooooo happy!



After the ceremony, we hiked up to Newmarket to set up the decorations at the banquet hall. So I think when a bunch of designers get together, you really can't help but end up with a branded wedding. The centerpieces themselves was totally a collaborative project. Jess and Eric actually grew pots of wheatgrass for weeks beforehand, appropriately reflecting their spring green theme. Winnie (winniema.ca), the bridesmaid who art directed the creation the bird toppers on my cake, created the menu and other matching stationery items, and Mike (miketjioe.com) had been running around at Ikea that very morning to buy branches for the table numbers he had made. He also put together a photobooth at the reception where everyone could take photos with wacky dollarstore props (the elderly adults got really into it). It was pretty awesome to see all our creative minds come together in a mutual effort to make our friend's day really special :)

Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket
Photobucket

I was really pleased with how the layers turned out. Although green tea layer was darker and more brownish than green, it still came out in a pretty striped pattern.

It was a long, hectic, but celebratory day. I can't wait till the next chance I can make another wedding cake! In the meantime, congrats again to the happy couple!

Photobucket

Saturday, May 22, 2010

The Wedding Cake: Part 1

Photobucket
Ah, young love. And what better way to celebrate... than with cake? A wedding cake!

Congratulations to Jess and Eric! This past Saturday I witnessed, Jessica - a fellow design nerd and friend who I met through university - walk down the aisle and be wed to her longtime sweetheart, Eric. It was the sweetest wedding that perfectly complimented the couple themselves. To top it all off, I had the honour of making their wedding cake in celebration of their big day! It was my first time making a wedding cake, and I was thrilled to have the chance to put my cake-making skills into real world (wedding) action.


It was a collaborative project, with Winnie (a mutual design friend) art directing her talented aunt to make the gorgeous bird wedding toppers, and myself making the cake. Needlesstosay, this cake would not have been able to happen without the HUGE help I got from some very key people: my dad (shopper of groceries), James (personal assistant, cake transporter, and skilled dowel-cutter), and my mom (the ultimate cleaner-upper who saved the kitchen from becoming a complete minefield). Thank you all so much! Thanks also to Susie and Andrew Yang for letting me store the cake at their beautiful new home, so we would've have to circle back and forth commuting.

So was it hard? Yes. Was it time-consuming? Yes. Was it fun? Yes. Would I do it all over again? Definitely, yes!

Photobucket

The inspiration for the cake came from Jess' custom made wedding invite, which she, of course, made herself. For those of you who don't know, Jess is a mega-super talented, detail-orientated, crazy hard working designer who seems to be able to churn out jaw-dropping, meticulous designs on very little sleep. She has won numerous awards from Adobe and Applied Arts, and rightly so. I've always been amazed and inspired by both her work and her work ethic, and often like to shamelessly promote her amazing skills, since she is too modest to do so herself. :)

Photobucket
PhotobucketPhotobucket

Isn't her invite gorgeous? From the perfect hand-lettering to the cute bird motifs, it was so creative and so very "Jess". Her theme was appropriately based on the verse Ecclesiastes 3:1-7, "A Time for Everything", as she and Eric had met through church and had been dating for a long, long time, since early high school. For more amazing Jess work, visit her portfolio site here: http://www.jessatwork.com/

The couple had requested a green tea flavoured cake, which was perfect, seeing as their wedding colours were light pastel green and yellow. Based on the details of her invite, I sketched up plans for a two-tier wedding cake that would alternate layers of green tea and vanilla cake, with a cream cheese filling and a vanilla buttercream exterior.

PhotobucketPhotobucket

So, that was uh, the initial plan. Did it follow through? Nope. Not exactly. It was my first time creating a tiered cake and I would be lying if I said that I knew what I was getting myself into. Did it turn all right in the end? Thankfully, yes. Perfect? No way. But it tasted awesome and was so well-recieved at the reception, and by Jess and Eric that I was practically beaming the whole night away. That being said, I learned a few key things along the way...

Photobucket

Lesson learned #1: Plan, plan, plan. Holy moly, I can now never underestimate the importance and critical value of planning and preparing in advance. My usual spontaneous, impromptu cake-making self took a hard hit when I hit a few planning potholes. Note to self: Take considerably more time beforehand to figure out exactly what I need, when to get it all, when to bake, how to transport, where to store, and so on, to prevent last-minute freak-outs, anxiety attacks, and under eye-baggage.

Photobucket

Lessons learned #2: Make a test cake. Um, so although this sounds like a no-brainer, I am guilty as charged. One of the main issues I had with the cake was the frosting. The issue was that I needed a buttercream that would taste good (not too sweet), pipe well, and be able to sit at room temperature for at least half a day. My attempt to make a swiss meringue buttercream a few days prior did not go over well at all, so I settled for a cooked milk-and-flour buttercream instead that I made on the night before, thinking it would work fine. This also refused to cooperate and left me with a watery mess and unsightly air pockets. *pulls hair out*. Lucky for me, I managed to fix my consistency issues by mixing together the buttercream frosting with the cream cheese one.

Photobucket
Photobucket

Lesson learned #3: Do your research. So who knew that cardboard cake rounds could cause so much grief? You see, the base of the cake tiers are supported by cardboard rounds that sit on wooden dowels inserted into the cake. I somehow either managed to buy rounds that were too big, or did not put enough frosting on the sides of the cake to match the size. I also got very, very confused with the top tier, ended up making the wrong cake size, and had the base poking out from the bottom. To top it all off, the cardboard was too thick to be able to pierce with the central dowel! Baaahhhhhhh... Well, somehow I managed to fix all the issues, but next time, I will just do my research before hand and buy the proper cardboard rounds!

The cake making process took place over a span of two days, as decorations would be piped on site at the reception hall. It was a long day of baking, stacking, icing, and doweling, and I went to bed that night exhausted yet happy.