Kid’s Parties

Breakfast Party Invitations

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I accidentally omitted the invitation details from my last blog post about Portia’s Breakfast Party, so here they are!

I really wanted to do something creative for the invite, with little individual boxes of cereal (with a decorated luggage label attached with the party details on it).  However, believe it or not, the boxes were discontinued and replaced with packets only four months prior to the party! I couldn’t find them anywhere for love or money.

So, instead of using the boxes, Portia created an invite on her iPad, which we placed in an envelope with the cereal packet tied on top with some bakers twine. We topped it off with a bamboo spoon inserted through a doughnut printable from Oh Happy Day. The girls loved them – easy, but cute!

Kid’s Parties

Breakfast Party

50532B20-6452-4F12-A347-DF02C3819558 Recently we celebrated Portia’s thirteenth birthday with a breakfast party. She loves breakfast food, so this was a fun idea and quite simple to put together. Portia also loves pastels, so I used this for the styling theme.

On the menu was bacon, three types of breakfast cereals (the sugary kind usually forbidden in our house), waffles with maple syrup, whipped cream, berries, choc chips and chocolate, caramel and blueberry sauces for toppings. There was also a DIY station to make smoothie bowls with lots of different toppings. The smoothie contained frozen cherries, bananas and coconut yoghurt blended up together. The girls had a lot of fun making their own concoctions.

For drinks, we had two different kinds of homemade lemonade infused with crushed strawberries and puréed watermelon and mint respectively. I was excited to find the recipe for the cake on the Sugar and Sparrow website (link here). It’s a milk and cereal cake containing crushed cereal, icing made with cereal infused milk and topped off with a milk splash. What could be more appropriate for a breakfast party!

B6BE10E7-6AC8-4C2A-9A8F-BFF103D25AC6 I love the styling aspect of a party, as each time I get to use some ideas from my Pinterest board. This time my girls and I painted some jars on the inside with pretty pastel colours to use as vases. I also enjoyed making a hanging flower wall as a backdrop with some washi tape. Both were very simple projects which looked effective.

For the table I used a white tablecloth as a base, overlayed with a pastel vintage tablecloth I found in an op shop. Target had some lovely pastel paper plates, cups and napkins, which I combined with some of my mismatched collection of vintage china. I reused some doilies I had dyed for the Mad Hatter Teaparty for the centre of the table, along with some tea lights. The roses were from my garden.

This was the most grownup I had ever seen this peer group at a party (I guess they really are young adults now)!  Instead of tearing about the place they were happy to chat, make some milk bath (recipe here) and play scattergories and twister. All too soon the party was over and it was time for the girls to go home. The party bags were a labour of love this time! I sewed each one using this great tutorial. I hadn’t put in any zips since home economics at school, so I was really pleased with how they turned out!

Do you love to eat breakfast foods at any time of the day like we do?

Kid’s Parties

Every dog has it’s day . . .

C0D56D3B-B8D5-4A36-BB44-33F086DBA7EENot a day in this case, but a party! My daughter, Portia has a very cheeky dog called Popcorn who she adores, so her birthday party last year was a celebration of all things dogs. Popcorn even had a look in on the celebrations!  It was a quick party to pull together – I was very busy at the time, so this was a real bonus. For invitations we used a photo of Popcorn. I made some cupcakes (some with Oreo and smartie dog paws on them), and also used some dog toys I got from the Reject Shop as cupcake toppers. The cake was a rosewater vanilla layer cake (recipe here), topped with some dog figurines (one with a custom made party hat). I added some nasturtium leaves on the front.

DB0C40AE-ECEC-43B0-9CB4-1B015B153A35The food was simple to put together and fun to label. I used free food label printables from here. We had pupcorn, dogs in blankets, puppy chow (chocolate treats that look like dog food served in a dog food bowl), a water bowl (which was blue jelly) and a yoghurt parfait bar. The drink was puppacinos!

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I used a length of fabric with dogs on it as a table runner and all Portia’s dog toys (being such a dog lover, she’s amassed a few) as table decorations. I was also able to locate some paper napkins with dogs on them.

D326627F-5A24-48B4-B853-05E20DAE3F35The girls played guess the amount of dog treats in the jar and also went on a treasure hunt with Popcorn in tow around our neighbourhood. I think I had as much fun as the girls, thinking up rhyming clues and leaving them at locations for them to find. The clues led back to a treasure chest which contained a lip balm for each guest and was hidden in our tree house. The treasure hunt was inspired by the ones Mum prepared for my parties growing up on the farm. They were the best! Would still love to go on another one of those treasure hunts, even as an adult.

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The clues

The girls took home favour boxes containing a stuffed dog each, which I sourced on sale from KMart. The girls had a blast, as did Popcorn!

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Popcorn the party dog!
Kid’s Parties

Pamper Party

510206A2-F838-470F-B6AE-7F170FE0737DHarriet recently turned eight and we celebrated with a spa party! The inspiration for this came from some sleep masks I was gifted by a friend several years ago, which I used for the invitations. I used a free printable from here and attached it to the mask with a fancy pin. I also searched online for some printables of cucumber slices to decorate the envelopes.

4E8BF2FB-D6B3-407B-825A-5D5A58F13ED5This was a fun party to put together! I borrowed three foot spas for the girls to enjoy and also an essential oil diffuser to create a special atmosphere. I kept the beauty treatments simple with just some face masks and nail polish for manicures. We also made some lip balm with jelly crystals, petroleum jelly and coconut oil at the party. The girls decorated tiny pots I bought from a discount store to put the lip balm in. This was a popular activity! The lip balm recipe can be found here.

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At first I was a bit stuck for inspiration for the decor and colour themes for this party. I wasn’t sure whether to go for a tropical theme, an eco spa theme or something girly and pretty. In the end it was a fusion of all three styles with tropical influences for the food. I loved the way it all worked out and was glad to be able to use my husband’s beautiful Valentine’s Day bouquet of flowers for the table.  I hung some pink tissue paper flowers I’ve had for years around the room and some pinecone wreaths my Mum made for Christmas one year over the table. Some relaxing spa music was playing in the background to set the scene!

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Planning and making the food is probably my favourite part of a party. I used some old issues of Donna Hay Kids’ Magazine (great for party planning) for inspiration. I made mango jelly topped with banana and passion fruit, coconut ice cut into flower shapes, cupcakes with sugar flower leis, kiwi fruit flowers topped with raspberries, sausage rolls, mango coconut smoothies, watermelon fries with coconut lime dip (recipe here) and orange creamsicle yogurt bites from here.  All very delicious! The cake was a frangipani (reminiscent of a tropical day spa). I also placed some frangipani flowers in the foot spa water.

16ABA4E5-B8CE-4111-AE7A-73AC51316049Lastly, but not least, the favour bags consisted of lip balm wrapped up in a homemade scrunchie which I enjoyed making on my sewing machine. The girls went home refreshed and pampered after a long week at school!

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Kid’s Parties

Mad Scientist Party

5BC32609-2C35-444C-B56C-FCDD276E97A2I had a lot of fun preparing for this party. Reuben turned nine and we celebrated with a bang! We conducted lots of exploding, flying, popping, and foaming experiments which boys of that age love. The invites were a free printable from here with some more free printables as embellishments for the envelope from here and here.

EEEE1B51-3EC0-4AAF-A65C-6B6570FEA873The party food was also a lot of fun to make. My husband (who helpfully is a doctor), carved a watermelon into a brain pattern and supplied some syringes which I set jelly inside (they were a huge hit)! We also had little “petri dish” jellys with sour worms set in them. I made eyeballs from babybel cheeses (instructions here), and periodic table pies from a Donna Hay Kids party magazine (homemade meat pies with pastry numbers and letters on them from the periodic table). I used some food colouring to colour some popcorn and made the mad scientists from Easy Party Cakes by The Australian Women’s Weekly.

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The drinks were a “make your own” experimental concoction of different cool drinks with crazy swirly straws. The cake was the Volcano Vomitus from Cheat’s Cakes by The Australian Women’s Weekly.

5A9EEEA7-D6A1-4D4D-A206-F2FC81B3920FFor decorations I used some test tubes filled with coloured water, and some beakers filled with lollies with hobby fill “smoke” coming out of the top. I also used some gross items missing from certain family members (gallstones and wisdom teeth)!, as well as some dried out and preserved lizards Reuben had collected. I placed some toy snakes and lizards in some jars of coloured water to make them look like they were pickled, as well as some eyeball bouncy balls. My husband drew some scientific formulas (all those years at uni paid off) onto a chalk board and I printed out some periodic tables (from here).

81F5E660-4F3A-47F6-B963-CFC4D6C5E3D4The experiments were largely carried out on a plastic covered table outside to help contain the mess. Each child was given a jar in which to conduct their experiments. I tested some of the ones I wasn’t sure about ahead of time and had a surprisingly good time doing so! One of my favourites involved lighting a piece of paper and dropping it inside a glass bottle and then placing a peeled hard boiled egg on the top of the bottle and watching it get sucked inside! Lighting up empty teabags and watching them turn into rockets (instructions here) was my other favourite. Also popular with the kids, were the vinegar volcanoes (pictured above), and the elephant toothpaste (instructions here).

B4FC8BF3-71EF-4D12-BDDD-4EF4166C8BFFWe also had fun with diet coke  and mentos and the skittle experiment (where you make a ring of them on a plate and add a little water, to make a rainbow pattern).

This party was a lot of fun to put together and held the attention of this age group beautifully. The boys looked gorgeous in their safety glasses with their studious engrossed mad scientist faces!

The party bags contained some glow sticks and some weird sour lollies. My husband was able to source me some biohazard bags which were perfect as party bags.

A014EB46-1002-44D8-ABC6-369D94D49FA8Do you have a favourite science experiment?

Kid’s Parties

For the love of a good party

89114F56-6174-41A3-8142-802EBA255A24I remember this party so well! I’m on the far left and Mum is cutting the cake. I love the look of joy and anticipation on my face (and on some of my friends’ faces). I have photos of my kids, capturing this same look at birthday cake cutting time – it’s a special moment.  This party had a circus theme and was complete with sideshow alley stalls and a toffee apple and popcorn seller. I remember thinking the circus carousel cake was absolutely magical. My Mum is one of the best party planners I know and has been my greatest inspiration for hosting events.

D3C18FBC-EC5B-45A1-8250-FC855C26D1B0Mum wrote up all her parties in her scrapbooks and I loved reading them as a child, just as I still do now. The party written about above was another birthday for me with a Wind in the Willows theme. I was given (and still have) a Wind in the Willows cookbook and a lot of the party food came from there.

F7F88730-6AF2-4421-820E-E4FB665C1581Another book which really sparked my imagination growing up, and set me on a path of joyful party planning was Mum’s copy of The Australian Hostess Cookbook. I was fascinated by the descriptions of actual events the contributors to the book had hosted all over Australia – some on far flung stations in the outback and some in city locations. The descriptions of how these parties were hosted, what the host and guests wore and the menus, is today a really interesting historical reflection of this era.

When I went to boarding school at age twelve my growing collection of cookbooks came with me. I remember reading them as bedtime stories, planning dishes to make on my next trip back to the farm for holidays. Do you have events, books or special people who have inspired you?

 

Kid’s Parties

Paddington breakfast

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I’m currently in the midst of preparing for a unicorn party for Harriet’s seventh birthday (more about that in a later post), but in the meantime I thought I’d share the photo from her birthday breakfast.

We saw Paddington 2 at the movies over the school holidays and fell in love with it! Paddington Bear was on the top of Harriet’s birthday list, so this inspired me to put a Paddington inspired breakfast together for before we dashed off to swimming lessons. It was very quick and simple to do.

I used a length of British flag material I had purchased a few years ago for my Anglophile husband’s English birthday dinner as the tablecloth, found some old London inspired toys the kids had as toddlers and used this printable to make some party bags for the table. One of the presents was a replica of the pop up book from the movie.

We really should have had marmalade sandwiches for breakfast, but instead we feasted on waffles!

Kid’s Parties

Down the rabbit hole . . .

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Well, this is my first blog post and I literally feel like I have fallen down a rabbit hole, with all the foreignness of the technical requirements to create my own blog. It’s been a journey, but I’ve finally arrived!

The first event I’d like to share with you is a birthday party I held for my daughter, Portia on her eleventh birthday. She has always been captivated by Disney’s 1951 Alice in Wonderland movie, especially the scene from the woods with the mad hatter’s tea party. This was at night in the movie (Portia loves the mystery of it), so the party had to be in the evening.

Invitations were sent out inside little boxes from the two dollar shop. I like to put some effort into the invitations, as they set the scene for the party and create joyous anticipation! Link for printable on the front of the box here.

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I love to create a party around a theme and take time before the event to do some research for inspiration. Research for this party involved buying a copy of Alice in Wonderland and reading it from cover to cover. I discovered some misconceptions I had held all my life as I read. I always thought Alice’s crazy world had been created by a gentleman experimenting with an early form of LSD, but how wrong I was! Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland was first published in 1865 by an English mathematician, Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, writing under the pseudonym of Lewis Carroll. It is one of the best examples of the literary nonsense genre.  Reading the book definitely did mess with my head (my mind felt like it was warping) – not an entirely pleasant sensation for one who likes to feel in control! Nevertheless, it was entertaining and I discovered the source of some sayings that have passed into common usage.

Eight girls were invited to the party, and I’ve got to say this is a particularly giggly age group. Excitement was riding high!

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I hung some vintage teacups from the branches of an eucalyptus tree in our backyard and set a table underneath. Some paper lanterns were hung over the table to set the scene. I raided my cupboards for items which would help me achieve the sophisticated high tea party meet crazy, whimsical world feel. It was a lot of fun! A separate table was created on the lawn from a packing crate covered with an old quilt and a strip of artificial turf. Cushions were placed around the low table for the girls to play cards during the party (very in keeping with the theme).

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Food included playing card biscuits (store bought biscuits with royal icing cutouts), a fruit platter (made on a slice of whole watermelon cut out with heart cutters to hold berries), mini rainbow sandwiches with brightly coloured fillings (beetroot, sweet potato and carrot and green pea and avocado – all cooked and puréed with cream cheese), princess teacups (link here), cake pops, jam heart biscuits and strawberry jelly set in vintage teacups with strawberries. Op shops are always fun places to search for vintage items for parties. I also made clock face macaroons by sticking a free printable (link here ) to each side of a macaron with some icing. In keeping with the madcap theme, the cake was a confetti layer cake with pouring sprinkles illusion. Drinks were strawberry milk and iced tea poured from teapots.

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I used this tutorial to dye some doilies to add some girly prettiness to the table. The other printables I used for place cards, food labels and the party bags came from here, here, here and here. I also used mini bottles at each place setting from the two dollar shop with a “drink me” printable glued on (printable here).

38119DD2-CBB8-4E58-B037-A101E7ABEE00F1C1B804-67D6-437E-88B2-4AB3B2E4740FAs well as party bags, the girls took home edible terrariums, which I created based on this tutorial.

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All in all, the party was a huge success and much fun was had by all. In the words of Lewis Carroll, published in a letter to every child who loves Alice:

“ but it is good, even now, to think sometimes of that great morning when the “Son of Righteousness shall arise with healing in his wings”. Surely your gladness need not be the less for the thought that you will one day see a brighter dawn than this”