This easy cake painting tutorial shows you how to hand paint beautiful floral art onto a cake using buttercream frosting, food coloring,Ā palette knives, and paint brushes! This simple cake decorating technique is perfect for your next birthday party or wedding, bridal, or baby shower!
Cake Painting is such a fun and unique cake decorating technique. Ā Plus, there are so many different ways and styles to paint a cake!
- Palette Knife Painting:Ā using buttercream frosting
- Paint Brushes: using buttercream, food coloring, or edible paint
- Watercoloring: using food coloring or edible pain on a frosting or fondant covered cake
- Airbrushing: using an airbrush machine
Or, you can do a combination of the above! All will create beautiful painted cakes.Ā The nice thing about this technique is it is completely customizable.
You can do floral, abstract, modern, Christmas and holiday themed, or even follow a Bob Ross tutorial.Ā If you can think it up, chances are you can paint it on a cake.Ā
Tools for Cake Painting:
- Cake Turntable
- Palette Knives and/or Paint Brushes
- Food Coloring
- Acetate Food Grade Paper (optional)
- Chilled and Frosted Cake
- Bowls or baking sheet for mixing buttercream and food coloring
Prepare Buttercream and/or Food Coloring
Buttercream Painting (palette knife or paint brush technique)
For painting a cake with buttercream frosting, use any type of light colored buttercream such as:
- Swiss Meringue Buttercream
- Vanilla American Buttercream
- Lemon ButtercreamĀ
- Italian Meringue Buttercream
Mixing Buttercream Colors for Painting:
- To mix the colors, I used a cookie sheet flipped upside down.Ā Ā
- Then put about Ā½ -Ā¾ cup frosting for each color and then a few drops of food coloring and mixed with a cake spatula.Ā
- I like this for buttercream painting because it was easy to move around and you can easily use the palette knife knife to mix and scrape the frostings together to make more colors – much like a traditional painting palette.Ā Ā Ā
- You can also use a plate or bowl to mix your colors.
Food Coloring (paint brush or watercolor technique)Ā
If youāre using food coloring, you can use water based for a watercoloring technique. This types of food color are not as pigmented so you can use them straight from the bottle.Ā
If using gel food coloring, I recommend mixed it with water or vodka to thin it out. Youāll still have a more pigmented color than water based food coloring, but it will dry much easier than if youāre painting with gel coloring right from the bottle.Ā
While I have not yet tried it, Wilton just started making edible paint which sounds perfect for cake painting.Ā
Sketch Out Your Design
A big tip for making your own painted cake is to practice your design before you go to your cake. For this cake, I sketched out some flowers and practiced on food grade acetate paper, but you can also practice on parchment or wax paper, or a plate.Ā Basically any flat surface will do.
It took a few tries before I got flowers I liked:
For this pink floral cake I used this palette knife kit but you can use any palate knives or paint brushes you want. Ā I used the round palette knife for the petals and the smallest knife for the stems and big leaves. I used paint brushes for the detail leaves on the top of the cake.Ā To color the buttercream, I used a tiny bit of rose pink for the petals and leaf green and forest green for the leaves and stems.Ā
When you’re happy with your design, paint on a very well chilled cake.Ā Ā Here are some other buttercream flower designs I tried:
Decorating Painted Cakes
Once youāve painted the frosting design you can use sanding sugar, sugar pearls, or other fun cake decorations like sprinkles or gold leaf foil sheets. Ā For this cake, I use yellow and white sanding sugar, with white sugar pearls. Some of the sugar pearls I covered in edible gold luster dust. Ā
Optional Cake Decorations:
Tips for cake paintingĀ
- Start with a fully frosted and very well chilled cake. Ā If the frosted cake is soft, itās more difficult to paint. You can also paint on a fondant or marzipan covered cake.
- Sketch out a design and practice on a flat surface before you go right to painting your cake.
- If the cake starts to get soft before youāre done painting, put it back in the fridge for 20-30 minutes to firm up.
- Use tweezers to get any sprinkles, sugar pearls, or other decorations exactly where you want them.
Looking for More Cake Decorating Techniques? Check These Out!Ā
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Cake Painting Tutorial
INGREDIENTS
- 1 Frosted Cake
- 1 batch Buttercream Frosting
- Food Coloring
Equipment
- 1 Cake Turntable
- Palette Knives
- Paint Brushes
- Acetate Paper optional
Instructions
- Sketch out an idea for your design
- On a plate, in a bowl, or on cookie sheet add about 1/2 cup of frosting for each color.
- Add your food coloring to each color and mix well.
- Once you've mixed your colors, practice painting your design on flat surface
- Once you're happy with your design, paint on a very well chilled cake
- If at any point the cake becomes too soft to paint on, put it back in the fridge to chill and firm up.
Pink Flower Cake
- Starting with a round palate knife, add a bit of pink buttercream. In a downward motion make the first petal, like you are wiping the buttercream off the knife and onto your surface. Repeat in a circle for 4-5 leaves, making sure you are are always swiping inward.
- Using a small palate knife, add green frosting. Move downward from the bottom of the flower to the bottom of the cake. Clean the palate knife and highlight with the lighter green. For the leaves use the same palate knife and stroke outward in a leaf shape. You have to play with the angles a bit to get your desired thickness, and it can vary depending on what palette knife you're using, that's why practicing helps.
- Continue making flowers and leaves around the cake.
- Add flowers on the top of the cake. Use a small paintbrush for leaves.
- Using your finger, gently press sanding sugar to the center of the flowers. Using tweezers or your hands, add sugar pearls to the center of the flowers.
Notes
- Practice your design. I did my design one day and the next day, when I went to paint it on the cake, IĀ had to re-practice until I got the hang of painting the design again.Ā
- Make sure your cake is very well chilled or it will be hard to paint on.Ā Ā
- You can also paint directly on a marzipan or fondant covered cake.
Marylin says
So beautiful! I canāt wait to get started on my own cake creations.
Lathiya says
What a gorgeous cake…I couldn’t take my eyes of it. Amazing job you have done.
Mirlene says
Ah, this cake is nothing less than a piece of art. Looking absolutely delicious and perfect to celerbate a special occasion!
Jayashree T.Rao says
Stunning cake with those beauty florals, I do want to try making it, I would like to just keep gazing at it.
Jenni LeBaron says
I’ve seen this type of decoration before and always wondered how to do it myself. Glad to see your post because it makes it sound so approachable and doable for me!
Amanda says
Oh, wow! This is seriously impressive, and you’re very talented. Admittedly, I’m not the best cake decorator, but you definitely inspired me to give it a try!
Ramona says
This cake looks stunning and your technique is incredibly gorgeous. Love it! Great work!!
Jere Cassidy says
I love this technique and your cake is so simple and beautiful. Glad to see more buttercream decorated cakes again.
Jacqueline Debono says
Absolutely stunning! I’ve never tried painting a cake but you make it sound doable (even though I’m not really artistic!) Can’t wait to try this! Pinning for later!
Kelly Anthony says
Simply beautiful! I can’t wait to paint my daughters cake for her birthday.