Animation Guild

Spring 2018

Animation Guild | We are 839 Digital Magazine

Issue link: http://digital.copcomm.com/i/990677

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 10 of 47

SPRING/SUMMER 2018 11 A F T E R H O U R S of Rise of the Guardians—and now DreamWorks is one of her biggest clients. Holding down a full-time job and working on cakes in her off-time means there's a lot to do and just 24 hours in each day. Abarca and her husband have their workflow down to a science: He handles the architecture of each design—the rigs and other structural details, along with the actual baking—while she works on the sugar sculpting. "[The heads] take the longest to sculpt," she says. "I'll make the head out of chocolate or rice crispy treat so I can take my time sculpting it. Once the head is in then I'll put in the rest of the body as cake a day before the event." The precision required in her day job leads her to create more than just a beautiful cake; instead her artistry appears to transport characters directly off the screen and into her confectionary creations. "We really try hard to depict the likeness of the character and stay true to who the character is," she says. "Because of that, and because of our time constraints, we just stick to a few orders a month. This is why we can't really do birthday parties—we just don't have the time." Those orders include giant cakes to celebrate openings, but sometimes they're large quantities of cupcakes to send as gifts to the Hollywood Foreign Press or other individuals studios want to schmooze. "Most of the work I do is large cakes, but then I get these really intricate little cupcakes and gifts," she says. "Those are fun, too, but it's a completely different way of working because you become kind of like a manufacturer, because you're working on, like, 100 Poppy heads [from Trolls]. It's really excruciating, but they are so cute at the very end, and they're all edible." Sugar sculpting offers Abarca a different creative outlet than the one she gets at her day job. "I'm a surfacing artist, so I'm constantly painting and working on these characters, and their hair, and stuff like that, but there's something different about physically sitting down and sculpting something with your hands versus a computer," she says. "There's something satisfying about it, and it's just very peaceful." Abarca's daughter is now 11 and her son is 9, and the kids help out the business however they can—while they aren't in the kitchen yet, they earn pocket money folding boxes and doing other easy work. But even they don't always get custom birthday cakes anymore. "Everybody always asks, 'They must get the coolest cake,' but really the poor things usually get not-very-cool cakes. By the time their birthday runs around and it's like, 'Do I really have to make another cake?' They're so cute, because most of the time they'll say stuff like, 'No, mommy. You don't have to sculpt that. I can just put a toy on top of it.'" Want to see more of Abarca's creative confections? Visit her at facebook.com/ FernandaAbarcaCakes/ or follow her on Instagram @fernandaacakes

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Animation Guild - Spring 2018