Making beautiful and easy vintage wedding confetti

Like many, I have had a fantasy Pinterest wedding board for years. I think I started my wedding board 5 years ago, which means we were only about 6 months into our relationship. It’s not that I started planning our wedding then, it’s just that there are so many great ideas on Pinterest it’s important to save them when you see them. You never know when you might need them in the future.

I was under the impression that I wouldn’t marry again (my previous marriage was short and not particularly pleasant at times so I just didn’t feel the need to do that again). Don’t get me wrong, it wasn’t that I wanted to be alone. Just that I thought I would be happy to live together without the need for that piece of paper. But then things got serious between Rex and I and the thoughts of what our wedding would look like started to creep into my head.

I mean, after all, I am a girl, it’s only natural.

Before I had even met Rex I used to always say to people that everyone that got married before the invention of Pinterest should get a do-over. Fast forward to today, about a month after the wedding and I can safely say it was a Pinterest-perfect wedding. As many of you know, I am a do-it-yourself kinda gal. So of course, I am diy-ed as much as I could. I had saved a pin with sheet music rolled into a cone filled with flower petals. I loved the idea but as we had a flower and lace thing going on, I decided I would use paper doilies.

 

Dollar store paper doilies and dried flower petals! So cheap and easy to come by!

I am thrilled with how they turned out, I think they are the perfect vintage, garden-party, old English addition to our special day. I don’t know if it’s a tradition in Canada, but in England (where I am from) throwing confetti at the bride and groom is essential. It’s not a proper wedding until you’re digging confetti out of your dress all night. In place of traditional confetti (which we have found difficult to find in Canada) I opted to use dried flower petals. They are beautiful, and they smell good!!

It’s an extremely easy craft and they were one of my favorite elements of our wedding!

Simply roll up a paper doily (I used the 6.5″ size round ones and some 6.5″ square ones), and glue the edge with a hot glue gun.

Aren’t these flower petals beautiful? I love them!

And fill with dried petals. I had bought 3 shoe boxes full of dried flower petals cheaply on a Facebook page, and I started drying and saving all of the flower petals from flowers I had bought to jazz up the kitchen, and I didn’t end up even using 1 full box but I’m sure I’ll find a use for the remaining 2 boxes!!

 

We purchased this Franks beverage crate at an antique store in Arizona during one of our trips down there and it used to live on our kitchen counter with mason jars in that used to hold our utensils but it made the perfect display crate for these confetti cones.

So fast and easy! And beautiful!

My love/hate relationship with macarons

I LOVE macarons! Delicate, sweet, available in any imaginable flavour, and without a doubt, the most beautiful treat in the history of existence!

I have a huge sweet tooth and generally like anything that even resembles sugar. I’m not much of a baker though. I’ve always been the type of person that marches to the beat of my own drum. Not much for rules. Always challenging the norm. You know the type.

The people closest to me (sorry Rex) have their hands full with me some days. If there is a difficult way to do the simplest task, that’s the way I’ll do it.

Every time.

Which is why I don’t bake. You can’t just wing it. You have to measure everything out in precise proportions. And that’s just not what I’m about.

But I am also the type of individual that thrives on a challenge. So about a year ago, I decided it was time to embark on the ultimate challenge – making macarons.

Now I’ve read lots and lots of blog posts about making these delectable little beauties and all of them said that they weren’t for the faint of heart. And I just took that as a personal challenge. “Challenge accepted” has been my personal mantra since I first heard those words from Barney Stinson’s mouth. (And if you need to ask me who Barney Stinson is, we can no longer be friends……just kidding….well, sort of….)

My first attempt at making macarons was actually pretty successful. I even went as far as to grind whole almonds into almond flour first. I no longer do this. I just purchase already ground almond flour, cause I’m lazy like that. I made some berry flavored ones, and then I made some chocolate orange ones. Both were delicious. BUT. My kitchen looked suspiciously like an atomic bomb went off. I swear I used every bowl in my kitchen, and I have A LOT of bowls. I’m getting it down to a fine art now, so it’s only about 50% of the items in my kitchen that need to be washed between batches.

Now, I’m neck deep in this wedding planning and prepping things and I got the bright idea to have macarons. Another one of my personality flaws – once I get something in my head, there’s no going back. If that means I don’t sleep for a week, well, that’s just too damn bad. If it’s in my head, it’s happening. No matter what it takes. See what a peach I am to live with?

Did y’all know I was getting married? Well, I am. SOON! June 3rd to be exact. That’s why I haven’t been posting for a while, I’ve been crafting and planning up a storm. When we get back from our honeymoon you guys are going to be so sick of me. I have so many projects to post about that I made for the wedding, but I was waiting to post them until I got some beautiful professional pictures at the wedding. You just wait, it’s going to be legen-wait for it-dary. See what I started?!

Alright, alright, enough of that, back to the task at hand.

Pretty good for a non-baker, huh? I’m also pretty happy with my photography skills (I know I have a LONG way to go, but I’ve come a long way already!)

Today, I tried 3 different recipes. The first batch I made were the lemon ones found HERE. They turned out so well I will definitely be adding this recipe to my repeat list. They are cute little yellow bundles of sugar. I filled them with lemon curd instead of the lemon buttercream in the recipe but other than that I followed it to the letter. See, I can do it when I want to.

Next I made THESE vanilla bean macarons. I was so excited to make these, I love real vanilla beans but they’re so expensive I only use them for special occasions. It doesn’t get much more special than your wedding day so it seemed an appropriate time to break these bad boys out. And then they were a total flop. I’m talking all-melded-together-to-form-one-macaron. And then they fell. Everything about them was a fail. I’m sure it’s not a problem with the recipe, I’m sure it was entirely user error but I’m struggling to find the will to try this one again. Maybe I’ll just add vanilla beans to a recipe I know I can handle.

The last batch I made today was just a basic French macaron recipe (found HERE). I made this twice, once for the berry ones (that I filled with Orchard Berry jam) and once for the salted caramel ones (that I filled with Dulce Le Leche and a sprinkle of sea salt). Both batches worked out well, although the berry ones I had incorrectly read the recipe and used 2 egg whites instead of 3. I noticed after I had mixed them with the dry ingredients and it was a dry mix. I whipped up another egg white and added it and thought I would see what happened. They turned out but they are EXTREMELY fragile. As in, I broke every single one putting them together. But I’m using them anyway. Don’t judge me!

I still have planned to make some cookies and cream ones  (recipe HERE) this evening after the oven is finished with our dinner (stuffed peppers, and they smell amazing!) so I’ll let you know how it goes!

I’ve read a few posts about storing macarons and several people have had good success with freezing them after they are filled so i’m giving it a shot. Because I had to make them more than a week in advance (my schedule is pretty hectic for the next 10 days as you can imagine!) I am opting to freeze them. I am hoping that when I take them out of the freezer in 10 days they are just as beautiful as they are today.

And if they’re not.

Nobody needs to know they existed.

You won’t tell anyone, right?

All in all, I think it was a pretty successful day in the kitchen! I’m pleased with my happy little box of beautiful, dainty confections.

Challenge accepted!