Senin, 17 Maret 2014

Can you help me create a carnival themed birthday cake?




Abby M


I am looking to create a birthday cake for my daughter's 3rd birthday. We're going all out and doing a carnival themed birthday party with a tent, petting zoo, games, etc. I'm not really interested in buying a cake, I'd rather make it myself. The only problem I'm having is that I can't seem to really find any good ideas. I did see one for a popcorn box but it looked "sloppy". Any help would be greatly appreciated.


Answer
Carnival Party



A carnival themed party can be lots of fun for both the parents planning the party and the kids who are lucky enough to attend. With carnival style games as the entertainment and the prizes as the favors this party is sure to be a hit. A little imagination and some store bought supplies makes it easier than it sounds.

Invitation
On your computer you can print out a large ticket for "admission" into the birthday bash or if you can find popcorn bags at a restaurant supply store print the information on a card and place in the bag. There are also really cute store bought clown invitations you can purchase at party supply stores that will fit with the theme.

Decorations
Balloons in primary colors tied everywhere. If you have a good artist in the family have them draw up some carnival type posters onto poster board and hang throughout the back yard. A large canopy tent for the presents, cake, eating area can be set up to look like a big top and decorated with streamers.

Food
Serve all of your food at once or have a booth set up as a concession stand. The age of the children might be a deciding factor on this one, younger children might not take time out to eat unless they are instructed. Some suggestions for carnival style food are popcorn, hot dogs, corn dogs, ice cream bars, cotton candy (you can buy it already made), and for the cake you may want to decide to do cupcakes on this one (it will save serving time, you'll be busy with so many other areas of the party).

Games
Set up carnival style booths by using card tables, large boxes, plywood, sheets or any prop you may have to set up your games. Three or four games will be good you will need to have an adult or teenage child to work each booth. You can either make up tickets to play each game once or buy a roll of tickets to hand out a bunch of tickets and let them play for a certain time limit. If you've ever been to a carnival you probably already have some ideas in your head about the types of games you can play. In case you need some help here are a few to get you going. You can give small prizes at the booths such as stickers, candy, rings, etc. or have them win tickets to redeem prizes.

Ring Toss: Buy some plastic rings at a toy store and place some plastic soda bottles filled with water or you can have them unopened and drink them later.
Set them up in your "booth" and let the game begin.
Go Fish: You can buy a toy fishing set or make your own with a stick and some string. Tie a magnet to the string, make paper fish out of construction paper and clip a paper clip on the end. Using color-coded fish the player wins the prize that corresponds with the color of fish they caught.

Ball Throw: Use a TV tray or some other small surface to make a small pyramid out of aluminum cans, for older kids you can use something a little heavier. Use a lightweight ball to have the players knock the cans off of the surface.

Bean Bag Toss: Use a piece of cardboard and cut holes large enough for a beanbag to go through, larger for younger children. You can draw a funny face and use the mouth as a hole or have several holes on the board. The object of the game is to get the beanbag through the hole. You can use a chair or stepladder to support the cardboard.

Pick a Pop: Get a half of a Styrofoam sphere and a bag of lollipops. Color with a marker a few of the bottoms of the lollipops. Stick the lollipops into the sphere so you can?t see the colored marking, the guests pick a pop and if it has a color they win a special prize if it?s just plain they win the lollipop.

Activities
Along with the game booths you can also set up some other fun activity booths such as face painting, a tattoo booth (with removable tattoos of course), a finger painting table, and a photo booth (cut a hole for the face on plywood or thick cardboard and draw a funny body, take a Polaroid to give as a party favor). If you have a larger budget you can actually hire some entertainment like a clown or magician.

Party Favors
The prizes for the games become your party favors, make sure everyone gets to take home a prize by giving out something at each both (redemption ticket or small token prize). You can also give out pre-packaged cotton candy or animal crackers as part of their favor. A great place to find carnival favors and supplies is Oriental Trading Company, Inc.

Etiquette question for 2 year old's birthday party?




<3 I HAVE


I am having my sons birthday party at a zoo. The room is $100 for 2 hours and then $4 admission per guest over age 2. Is it tacky to ask the parents to pay for their entrance and I cover their child? How should I phrase this request in the invite?
That suggestion would be great if we had a house. We live in a small apt for the time being.



Answer
I dunno; if you can't afford it, I would say go for something simpler and cheaper. Is a zoo party really appropriate for a two-year-old? I'd think the older children would get a lot more out of it.

I would say that you can limit the adult guests to one per child. The invitations could say something like, "Daniel would like to invite Suzy and one adult to a party at the zoo!"

Depends on how well you know the other parents; if you know them pretty well, you can easily sound them out on the zoo admission thing ahead of time. However, if you are throwing this party just to Gain Status, and you don't really know these guys, definitely pay for them.

EDIT: I read somewhere that you should only invite as many kids as your kid is old. So, for a two-year-old's party, two guests is plenty. For an eight-year-old's party, eight kids would work.

If you have social obligations that you want to clear in one sweep, why not wait until spring, and then have a "block party" at a local park? You can have more fun with that, and it won't cost as much.

Also, look into renting a hall from a local church or possibly see if the local government has spaces you can rent (I live in Japan, and we have a kitchen, a gym, and several rooms available in our community center). Restaurants often have party rooms, too. (-: You can buy a lot of party favors for the bucks you save!

I really think the zoo is something to do with older kids, and in warmer weather.




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Title Post: Can you help me create a carnival themed birthday cake?
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