Here it is: the final cake for my Course I cake decorating class. I fully intended to practice my roses all week before class...pretty obvious that I didn't, right? LOL I had frosting consistency issues once again, which is why my roses are all ruffled and cracked along the edges instead of nice and smooth like they should be. I have no idea what I did wrong as I followed the frosting recipe exactly, but what I do know is that I will never be using that nasty Crisco recipe ever again; it's real buttercream or nothing from now on. I went through an entire large can of Crisco to make the frosting for my three class cakes. If that doesn't give you the dry heaves, then I don't know what will. ick. Course II makes all different flowers with royal icing and I'd like to do that one someday too. For now I'll just keep practicing the roses.
I had a great day yardsaling on Sa
These were from church sales as well. The star-shaped brooch was 50¢ and is the start of a stash of pretties to take to Silver Bella. The blue flowers are a pair vintage clip earrings and were $3.oo: those will go in the Silver Bella pile as well (incidentally, I tried them on and they are huge as earrings. They almost cover up my entire ear!) The little vintage Christmas figures were a dime each. The Mexican silver bead necklace is sterling and was a steal for $1.00--I polished it up and added the labradorite and garnet pendant. It's all sitting on a very vintage piece of Tupperware--it's marked 1954! It's a great big container, the kind that are perfect for holding cookies or rolls or caramel popcorn.
These sconces were also from a church sale, $5.00 for the pair. Okay, now I will admit that in their current state they are 100% tacky. However, I think that if I gave them a coat of white or cream spray paint and added pretty candles then they'd go from tres tacky to shabby chic! If nothing else, I could strip off all the chandelier crystals to use elsewhere and I'd still come out ahead. On closer inspection, I realized that the crystals hanging on the sconces are actually made of plastic but unless you look close and find the seam, you'd never know. In addition, the box held several real glass crystals and a bag of four glass crystal chains that I can use elsewhere.
At this same house I bought three old windows, but I don't have a photo yet. They were the amazing price of $3.00 each (old windows at the salvage store start at about $20) and the lady who sold them to me said they came from the garage of a 100-year-old house downtown that was being torn down. They're not paned, just one solid piece of glass and a frame around the edge but they do have the original hardware and old chippy white paint. I had to giggle as I found myself carefully choosing the windows that showed the most wear! Usually I'm trying to find the best specimens, not the junkiest. They need a good washing: I'm all for shabby but dead bugs, dirt and spiderwebs are taking things a bit too far. I'll photograph them then when they're all clean. They were my big score for the day!
If you want to see more bloggers' junk scores for the weekend, check out Sarah, Lucy and Andy--they all found great stuff!






