The Candy Flower Basket is easy to make, and
will turn heads wherever it is given. Here's what you need for a Candy Flower Basket:
You'll need a basket, of course, preferably around the size
of a medium to large flower pot (remember, we'll have "flowers" here).
Next, a large piece of flower arranging or art styrofoam, large enough
to fit in the bottom of the basket, filling it well and reaching up to
around 3 inches below the lip of the basket. Also, plenty of stiff,
green wire used in flower arranging; green flower tape; 2 1/2"
green wood sticks, pointed on one end, blunt on the other; thin wire;
a good supply of different wrapped hard candies, preferably with colorful
wrappers (yellow, orange, red, pink, and other "flower" colors are best);
and, finally, a LOT of bright, colorful cellophane sheets (green and red,
especially). Many of these supplies can be found at craft stores
or flower arranging supply stores. First, we'll make our candy flowers.
Cut the stiff green wire into 1 foot lengths. Make around 15 for a
decent size basket. Now, sort your candies by wrapper color.
You'll need 5 or 6 candies per wire. Take one of the candies and
hold one twisted end of the wrapper against the end of the wire.
Now, wrap the green floral tape tightly around the wrapper and wire a few
times. Don't tear the tape; once the candy is firmly attached
to the wire, continue the tape down the wire and wrap another candy around
1 to 1 1/2 inches below the first, depending on how many candies you'll
put on the wire. Continue this down the wire. When you've wrapped
5 or 6 of the same candies on the top half of the wire,
trail your tape off another inch or two on the wire. You've just
made your first candy flower! Set that one aside and start on the
next one. Try to have at least 4 different types of candies, so all
the flowers won't be the same color. Next, wrap the styrofoam in green cellophane
and put it into the bottom of the basket. Take your colored
cellophane sheets and cut around fifty 6" x 10" rectangles. Don't
worry about making them perfectly sized. Take one of the rectangles and loosely fold
it in half the short way (to make a 6" x 5" rectangle) and then in half
the long way (to make a 3" x 5" rectangle). Don't crease the folds,
and again, don't worry about being perfect - it'll look better if it's
not. Insert this rectangle into one of the open spaces closed point
down (the point that would be the center of the rectangle, if it was unfolded. Do this with 20 to 25 of the rectangles, until
the open spaces are filled, though not tightly. Fluff the open corners
of the rectangles out. Now, insert your flowers into the styrofoam.
Space them out evenly, and put around four inches of the wire down into
the foam, so it's secure. Here's a tip - slightly curve the wire
and insert it at a slight angle, so the flowers sit realistically.
Real flower bouquets don't stand straight up. Finally, take one of
the remaining cellophane rectangles, and fold it in the
same way as you did with the "fill-in" rectangles. Now, take one
of the short green sticks and a six inch length of the thin copper wire.
Wrap the wire three or four times around the blunt end of the stick, around
1/8" from the end. Put around 1/2" of the closed corner of the rectangle
against the blunt end of the stick, and wrap the remaining wire tightly
around it. Insert this in the styrofoam, in between the flowers.
Do this with the remaining rectangles, cutting more if necessary to completely
hide the styrofoam and fill out the basket. When done, fluff the open corners out. You
now have a Candy Flower Basket! The best thing about this is the fact that
it looks BETTER after the candy is removed! Put a note in with your
basket suggesting that people unwrap only the unattached end of the wrapper
to remove a candy. The candies look like buds while they're wrapped;
they look like blooming flowers with the candy removed! Try it with
one of your flowers and you'll see!