Огромная благодарность Yunjung Cake за Мастер-класс
Before Start
- Used gum & Fondant mixed (6:4)
- Wilton color-skin (orange) dress (teal)
- Hair(Lemon Yellow & Brown)
Step 2 - Pinching Nose
Step 1 Press at temples
Step 3 Make a chin
Step 5 Complement tzone using a tool
Face shape tutorial
Step 1 Start from Elsa Tutorial pages 4-3
Step 2 Drawing on white
Step 3 Drawing on white
Step 4 Drawing out of white
Step 1 Tiny white spot
Step 2 Burgundy Powder
Step 2 Cutting like a intersection
Red - Have to draw on white
Recommend printing actual size(want to make)
Front and Side
Has to rolled really thin
Rolling really thin
Painting with wilton teal color and sprinkle crushed sugar
Making shapes
Step 5 Braid hair
The last step!
Make a Beautiful Frozen Cake
Ta-Da!
Since Elsa is introduced as a young child at the beginning of the film, animators wanted the first glimpse of her powers to reflect her innocent and fanciful state of mind at the time. This included giving her first snowflakes a simple design. Her snow and ice patterns later become more intricate and complex when she is an adult. When Elsa finally lets go and really starts owning her cryokinetic abilities, the ice and snow that she make to get across the idea that Elsa has now grown up and become this beautiful, elegant, confident and powerful young woman.
Her ice castle, which she creates while singing "Let It Go", was designed to illustrate the maturing of her powers as well as to be "a manifestation of her feelings to the world". The palace is initially beautiful; however, after she is made aware of the destruction she has inadvertently caused, and as she is increasingly vilified and hunted by others, it becomes darker and more distorted, with jagged icicles forming on the walls. Snowflakes are these tiny little ice crystals that form in mid-air. And when there are changes in temperature and humidity, these snowflakes start growing in a pattern that's known as branching and plating. When Elsa builds her ice palace, it is amazing if—every step of the way as this castle forms out of thin air—it's just branching and plating, branching and plating all along the way.
Elsa's clothing is traditional Norwegian rosemaling was the inspiration for her costuming early in the film, her ice gown was designed similarly to her palace, with snowflakes heavily influencing the style. Her cape itself is a large snowflake.
Keep things simple, so make toppers out of the same fondant as you cover the cake with. Marshmallow fondant can get sort of droopy when it gets warm and you don't want Olaf melting so sprinkle in a little tylose powder while you are shaping and it will firm things up.
Order to keep the snowballs aligned, thread them on a kebab skewer that runs from his foot all the way through to his head. Leave enough sticking out the bottom to anchor him in the cake. The details are stuck on using either clear vanilla or vodka "glue"- unlike water, they evaporate relatively quickly attaching the part without leaving a sticky mess. Make the arms and hair let them dry for a couple days before attaching. Poke a little hole and then glue them on. Be sure to support them while they dry. It's also not a bad idea to make a couple spares in case you break one.
Make your antlers ahead of time it and let them dry. It will start out as little ropes of fondant and then use small scissors to make little snips to make the branches. Add more detail later on by brushing on some dark brown food colouring watered down with vanilla.
Store them in a cool dry place in a cakebox or other cardboard box. Don't use anything like Tupperware, you want it to "breathe".