"Living Canvas" celebrates the vibrant, ever-changing artistry of nature itself, where every scene—from a moonlit sky to a deep ocean—is a masterpiece. It symbolises the idea that life, in all its forms, is a dynamic and breathing work of art, constantly evolving and offering new beauty. This cake design encourages us to appreciate the intricate details and grand spectacles of the natural world, reminding us that we are all part of this magnificent, ongoing creation.
Tutorial: Crafting the "Living Canvas" Cake
Creating this multi-tiered "Living Canvas" cake with its framed natural scenes requires careful planning and a blend of fondant work, edible painting, and floral decoration.
1. Cake Tiers and Structure
- Bake Your Tiers: Bake at least three to four round cake tiers of varying sizes. A sturdy recipe like vanilla or lemon pound cake works well.
- Stack and Dowel: Once cooled, level and fill your cakes. Stack them carefully, using internal dowels (plastic or wooden) in each tier to support the weight of the tiers above it. This is crucial for stability, especially with the frames.
- Crumb Coat: Apply a thin layer of buttercream or ganache as a crumb coat to seal in crumbs and provide a smooth base. Chill thoroughly.
2. Creating the "Canvas" Panels
- Fondant Covering: Cover each tier smoothly with white or light blue fondant. This will be your main canvas.
- The Frames: Roll out brown or wood-grain textured fondant (you can achieve this by marbling light and dark brown fondant together). Cut out various shaped frames (rectangles, ovals) that will fit onto your cake tiers. Allow them to firm up slightly.
- Edible Art: On separate pieces of white fondant cut to fit inside your frames, carefully paint your miniature nature scenes using edible food gels or dusts mixed with alcohol (like vodka or lemon extract).
- Night Sky: Deep blues, purples, yellow crescent moon and stars.
- Forest Scene: Greens, browns for trees, a deer figure.
- Ocean Wave: Blues, whites for foam, perhaps a whale silhouette.
- Consider printing edible images of detailed scenes if hand-painting is too daunting.
- Attach Scenes and Frames: Once the edible paint is dry, carefully attach your painted fondant scenes to the cake tiers using a little edible glue or water. Then, position and attach the fondant frames around them.
3. Floral Embellishments
- Gum-paste or Fondant Flowers: Create a variety of colourful flowers (roses, peonies, small blossoms) and leaves using gum-paste or fondant. You can make these ahead of time and allow them to dry.
- Arrangement: Arrange the flowers and leaves artfully around the frames, trailing vines (thin strips of green fondant) across the cake tiers. Use edible glue or royal icing to secure them.
- Butterflies and Birds: Cut out small butterfly shapes from wafer paper or thin fondant and paint them. Add tiny fondant birds or edible wafer paper birds to appear as if flying around the cake.
4. Magical Touches and Base
- Edible Glitter: Lightly dust the cake with edible glitter for a magical shimmer.
- Edible Pearls/Sprinkles: Add small edible pearls or delicate sprinkles around the flowers for extra detail.
- Base and Banner: Place the finished cake on a sturdy cake board. Create a small fondant banner for the base, writing "Living Canvas" with edible ink.





