A Super Wings Birthday


Check out all the details about Cooper’s Super Wings birthday party. Read about the craft projects, invitation, and more below.

THE STORY

It’s a blessing and a curse being an art teacher mom.

A blessing because I always have art supplies on hand, ideas to fill rainy days, and I can make most of the decorations for events (such as a three-year-old’s birthday party).

It’s a curse because when it comes time for said birthday party I start planning craft project after craft project, decoration after decoration, thinking all the time, “I can do that, I can make that, I have time for one more thing, I can do it all.”

I went all out for Coopers 1st birthday. His second party was a lot more low-key, as I was nine months pregnant with our little girl. So by the time his third birthday came around I felt well-rested and ready to plan another party.

After many discussions, Nick and I decided a playground birthday party was the way to go. Cooper has a November birthday, so it was a risky choice as the weather is questionable in Georgia that time of year. But, it was worth the risk to not have to host a slew of three-year-olds in our little house. We looked at a couple of locations until we discovered the Dunwoody Nature Center.

It was a playground in the woods. A hike from the parking lot, but it felt magical. Plus, I could visualize it on a birthday invitation.

A SUPER WINGS BIRTHDAY

For months all Cooper talked about was a Donnie birthday party; more specifically a Donnie-themed birthday cake which quickly translated into the theme of the day. If you are unfamiliar, Donnie is a character from the show Super Wings. What gets me is the fact that Donnie is a fairly insignificant sidekick to the main character, Jet. He doesn’t even show up in every episode. But for some reason, my little man had his heart set on this yellow airplane.

The birthday invitation was the start of it all. I decided to do a quick watercolor of the playground for the front. After all, my painting class was in the middle of a watercolor project, so it was perfect timing to work with them. I then drew a Donnie and filled him in with Sharpie. Next, I scanned the drawing and painting into my computer and compiled the images together in Photoshop to create the back and front of the invite.

I was very happy with the look of the invitations and was relieved to finally send them out to his classmates. That feeling was short-lived as I began to realize we now had to actually plan the day.

I decided to keep it as simple as possible. We would throw some tablecloths on the picnic tables, pick up Publix subs, chips, juice boxes, the usual odds and ends for a lunch birthday. I was keeping decoration to a minimum with a handful of balloons and an easy to make birthday banner.

To create the banner I found pictures of all the characters online and saved them to my desktop. Next, I found a banner outline that I liked the shape of. I opened the banner outline in Photoshop, dropped a character in, and saved it. I repeated with all the characters and each letter in Cooper’s name. I then printed them on card stock and cut them out.

I laid the banner pieces on a table and cut two long pieces of twine. I evenly spaced each banner piece before laying the twine in the fold and sticking it in place with hot glue. I then added a dot of hot glue to each tip to hold the folded pieces closed.

The banner was an easy (and cheap) way to decorate and to section off the picnic tables so other playground goers knew that this was a separate event. Because the playground was set back from the parking lot we used balloons to help guide everyone to the playground area.

I found the Super Wing-themed balloons on Amazon, but of course, since Donnie is a smaller character, we could only find a big version of Jet. Cooper did not seem disappointed, he was too excited about the fact that we had a car full of balloons.

THE TREATS

I also outsourced the party favors. Nick and I debated between a few options before discovering a popcorn shop, Poppa Corns just down the street. Cooper got to select his own flavors to make a customized birthday mix. Between Cooper’s love for popcorn and the personalized touch, it was a done deal. Shortly after placing our order, my sister sent a recommendation for a baker ( I Canita Cake) who makes amazing custom cookies. I reached out to her and very quickly placed an order to have every Super Wing character’s face on a cookie. They were adorable.

The project I ended up overdoing myself on was the cake. After all, the cake was all Cooper talked about when we brought up his party. He didn’t request presents, or a birthday at all, he just wanted a Donnie cake.

I thought about making it myself. I brainstormed ideas, procrastinated, brainstormed more, and procrastinated again. As the big day got closer I started to chicken out and called every specialty bakery in the Atlanta area. If they could just sculpt the Donnie, I could stick it on a cake that I made. But I had waited too long. I made my bed, it was time to lay in it.

I went to Hobby Lobby and raided their cake supplies. I got a sphere cake pan, colored fondant, and an edible black pen.

On birthday party eve I started baking. I opted for boxed funfetti cake mix. I didn’t have the time to make a cake from scratch with the decorating looming ahead and funfetti is just fun, especially for a three-year-old.

While the cake was baking I rolled out my first batch of fondant and cut out clouds and the letters for his name. It wasn’t too bad! My confidence was building.

The rounds came out of the oven, once they cooled I began stacking them, I added my blue (from scratch) buttercream, and stuck the clouds around the side. I was feeling good.

Then I started the Donnie topper.

Issue #1: funfetti is very light and does not bake well in a sphere form. It didn’t hold it’s shape.

As quick as I could I stuck the two cake halves together, slapped on some buttercream and draped my carefully rolled out fondant on top. Immediately the cake started crumbling, the fondant started cracking. With one hand propping the mess up, the other was trimming and smoothing the fondant.

Around this time Nick walked into the kitchen, looked at the cake, looked back at me and asked, “So what’s plan B?” But I refused to give up. I cut out the details from blue and white fondant and strategically placed them to cover up mistakes. I reminded myself that Cooper would be looking for a yellow blob with eyes, it didn’t matter if it was perfect.

I used food color to add the tongue and eye details, and was still frightened. I then pulled out the black edible pen and it was a game changer. I got everything outlined, the mouth filled in, the eyes emphasized. Donnie wasn’t perfectly round and was cracking, but it looked like him.

I carefully added him to the top of the cake, and placed his wing on top. For the wing I cut the shape out of cardboard, coated it in buttercream, then wrapped it in fondant. I used a skewer to hold Donnie onto the cake and the wing onto Donnie.

The icing on the cake was at 1 am when I realized the four-layer cake plus a six-inch character on top meant the cake did not fit in my cake carrier. I threw together cut up cereal boxes, plastic wrap, and crossed my fingers that it didn’t collapse. I would not see it again until we arrived at the playground.

Other than a small section of icing that was scraped off, the cake survived. Cooper was over the moon and everyone was impressed. My first fondant experience was stressful, but for the most part successful. My favorite part was Cooper insisting he eat Donnie. It was his birthday after all.

The Super Wings birthday was a huge success. Cooper had the time of his life and the location felt so special. Although we had to haul coolers, food, and decorations through the woods and back, it was all worth it for my three year old big boy.

As soon as Cooper’s birthday was complete, I started working on Kennedy’s first birthday party, which was scheduled the weekend after. More to come on that soon!

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