My sister and I live in different countries and dream about styling a party together. She's a graphic designer and her little astronaut printables collection was my inspiration for my son's birthday party, as well as a wonderful collaboration experience. It was also a fun concept for a 2-year-old boy party! To coordinate with her designs I used green, blue and silver throughout the decoration as well as a little pop of orange. I added a touch of green and silver polka dots - from the table cloth (a piece of fabric atop the always reliable white cloth) to the napkins, drinking straws and favor boxes.
The invitation from Casos & Coisas da Bonfa.
The Sweets Table
The highlight, or "pièce de résistance" of the fête's décor was the solar system planets made out of paper lanterns (as you can see in the previous post), scraps of tissue paper and other supplies I already had at home. I moved our dining table in front of our large windows so the dark curtain panels could be the backdrop to many silver shinny stars.
For the sweets table I made "green alien" cake pops with a pistachio buttercream (which was absolutely delicious!) and whole wheat cookies shaped as rocket ships, stars and the number 2. I also served astronaut ice cream drops and the same freeze dried fruit that astronauts take along on space missions.
Freeze dried fruit from Trader Joe's and Whole Foods - raspberry, blueberry, banana and mandarin oranges.
I knew I wanted a simple but remarkable cake, and I got just that. I ordered a "green moon" crater cake from Sweet City Desserts and added paper cutouts using my sister's designs. Homemade whole wheat sugar cookiesPistachio "green alien"cake pops. You can find many cake pops (or cake truffles) recipes out there, so I'm not re-posting one here (unless you want me to, leave a note under "comments", please!). The basics of making a cake pop is to have a crumbled cake (please take the time and bake your own cake instead of using a mix from a box! For mine I used white whole wheat flour and raw sugar for added fiber and nutrition - no one can tell the difference!) plus some sort of "binding" agent, such as a frosting or filling - buttercream, cream cheese frosting, ganache, caramel, fruit jams, nut butters, brigadeiro, doce de leite, etc. Here I used a basic butercream recipe and added pistachio flour (ground pistachios) to the mix. It made all the difference, the flavor was fantastic!! For the final coat and to seal the "truffle", you'll need chocolate pellets or wafers (the more commonly used are candy melts, which are basically colored sugar and fats such as shortening. So if you want a healthier alternative, use organic fair trade chocolate - such as Dagoba chocolate drops - instead.)Rock sugar candy
Organic fruit lollipops; silver and white chocolate-covered Jordan almonds;
whole wheat cookies; and "moon rocks" key lime cookies
"Adopt an Alien" station: homemade green peppermint-scented play dough was used to create "aliens" by shaping them into little balls and adding assorted plastic goggly eyes. All looking forward for going to a good home :-)
The little ones loved to create their own aliens as well! For the play dough recipe, check out last year's party here.
Embellished wood spoons - in case you've missed the previous post.
Here's a close-up of the custom paper masks - they weren't originally included in Katia's printables kit, but I just had to have them, so my superstar sister designed them for me :-)
Finally, for the kids' complete bliss, we rented a rocket ship moon bounce from All Bounce Parties and had a space module tent on the backyard so they couldburn all that sugarplay all they wanted. And so they did!
Space module tent
A nice cold bucket filled with 100% real fruit juice rocket ice pops.
Solar System Wall Decals
Little astronaut reviewing his "astronaut manual"...
Is he an alien going undercover as a US astronaut?
Watch out!! A space man attacking a rocket ship cookie!
As party favors, kids took home the play dough, recycled crayons (with instructions on how to make them - see below), custom coloring pages and some of the hugging aliens.
Astronaut ice cream drops
Cute customized aluminum boxes were available for guests to take home the delicious cake and other treats.
So, that's it. I said I would go very basic and do a much smaller and "no-frills"party this year, due to soooooooo many projects lately - two big moves, career changes, kid starting school, mom starting school, and the list goes on... I tried to keep things simple, and gave myself permission to cut many project ideas that kept popping up on my mind. But I just couldn't resist on some of them and did more than I anticipated. It was all worth it, and one of the best parties I put together (at least in terms of fun - my kids LOVED it!!), especially considering the short time and modest budget.
Thanks for visiting and have a fantastic week, everyone!
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For more details and a little "behind the scenes" of the party, go to the previous post here.
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For more details and a little "behind the scenes" of the party, go to the previous post here.