How To Make Your Own Barbie Candy Dress Cake

I used to make candy cakes: Styrofoam cakes with candy hot glued to the outside. The candy simply pulls off the styrofoam and you take off the wrapper and enjoy. My Barbie Candy Cake is by far the most popular thing I’ve posted on Pinterest. It’s a cake with a REAL BARBIE DOLL INSIDE. No weird disembodied torso, OH NO. THE REAL DEAL. Here she is, in all her purple glory:

barbie1watermark

Pretty neat, yes? The advantage of creating these cakes at the candy store was that there was professional equipment at our disposal, like a heated styrofoam cutter, and literally hundreds of sizes and shapes of candy. While you don’t have an entire candy store at the ready, this Barbie candy cake IS possible to make in your own home. And hey – I needed a birthday present, so now is just as good a time as any to make the tutorial.

redbarbiewatermark

I will say that the equipment makes or breaks the “doability” of this project.

Supplies:

  • Hot glue gun
  • Hot glue
  • A hot styrofoam cutter OR serrated knife (a bread knife is cool)
  • A vacuum
  • A drill with spades*

*This is to drill the hole Barbie will go in. If you don’t have a drill you’re going to end up just hacking away a hole in the middle of the styrofoam so Barbie can go inside. Is this easy or safe? Not terribly. The wiser investment might be plunking down a 20 at Michaels for that hot styrofoam cutter.

Shopping List:

  • Anything from the above list you don’t have
  • (2) 8” Cake Dummies (they will be 4″ tall)
  • 1 9” Cake Round (Cardboard Circle)
  • Tissue Paper (to cover the cake round, so maybe in a coordinating color)
  • A chunk of cardstock 4”x8” (we literally used a chunk of a cereal box)
  • A Barbie, with a short skirt or bathing suit outfit
  • A giant pile of candy in your color scheme

 

Lets discuss the shopping list. The cake dummies are just round styrofoam chunks. Cake decorators use them for practice. You will use them to create the dress. They, and your cake round, can be purchased from any cake decoration store. Support a small business; shop at a local one!

As for the candy, I’d get a color theme in mind. Match it with your Barbie. My Barbie and candy was from around Valentine’s, so that’s why we’re working with a lot of red and pink. You want to make sure you’re picking things that will glue on easily. Anything like a Tootsie Roll isn’t ideal because the hot glue and the wax wrapper aren’t friends. It will just fall off. I love Air Heads candy because they’re a. delicious and b. get good coverage. Laffy Taffy in all it’s wonderful shapes and sizes is also a plus. The purple Barbie has a fan in the back of her dress made of a lollipop with more candy glued to it. My red Barbie just had a few small lollipops in the back. I like the tiny pops because they help fill weird holes and sometimes you can use the sticks for gluing (more on this below).

When thinking of where you can buy the candy, I’d look to local candy stores and bulk food shops first. I made the mistake of trying a Party City first. I went to three before giving up on them. A lesson in taking my own advice. Shop local!

A note: Please keep your kids in mind when picking candy. Allergies are always a concern and sometimes tiny candy is a choking hazard. Be mindful, be safe. Okay, you have a pile of tools! Lets GET TO WORK.

MAKING THE BARBIE CANDY CAKE:

barbiebootywatermark

1. Glue the two cake dummies together using hot glue, one on top of the other. You don’t need to hot glue the thing to death, just enough to create a solid bond, so you have a cylinder that is 8″ tall and 8″ across. While the glue cools…

2. Mark center on both the top and the bottom. That’s 4” in. At this point you’ll pick out your wide spade for the drill or if using a foam cutter, measure a 2” circle to be your guide for cutting out the middle so Barbie can fit. Barbie has booty.

3. Oh yeah, secure Barbie’s skirt, if she has one. I used the rubber bands from her packaging.

4. Get your vacuum ready and drill/cut your hole, working from the top and bottom so you meet in the middle. Our spade was 1.5”, so we wiggled it around a little. Styrofoam will fly and stick to everything because of static electricity and science. The vacuum will keep you from going crazy trying to clean up. The hot cutter will be cleaner and might not need the vacuum. If the edge is rough, that’s okay. You’ll cover it with candy.

 

geodresswatermark

Look! Barbie has a very couture minimalist wedding dress now. It’s a statement about the wedding industrial complex. She’s writing her thesis on it.


5. Take Barbie out and grab your cardstock. This is going to be a guide for the slope of your dress curve. Draw on the cardboard approximately what you want your curve to look like. Cut on the inside of the curve. This will give you your guide. You can see it below in the action shot of us cutting down the foam.

slicingwatermark

slicinggif

6. Take your bread knife or foam cutting knife and start shaving chunks away. Use the guide and check your progress, by holding it up to your cake. This will help you keep a consistent curve. Otherwise her dress might be weird and lumpy. Again, being exact isn’t 100% necessary because you are covering it with candy. I made a gif of that cutting action for you.

Another note: for the love of all candy, please be careful cutting and drilling and gluing this all together. There are so many exciting ways you can hurt yourself working on this. Take your time and be cautious. I will say it is most likely you’ll burn yourself with the hot glue gun. I’ve done it myself. Careful. Please. Thank you.

7. After cutting away the sides, do a height check. We found that Barbie’s hips were at about 7.5” so we cut a final half inch slice off the bottom.

Ooo dang it’s looking like a dress now!

foamdresswatermark

8. Now we assess our candy situation and think about how to design our dress. I completely just make up a dress. I use bigger candy as poofs and try to make layers. The nice thing about the hot glue is if it sucks, you can rip it off and start over. So play around. I like to use the rope Laffy Taffy to define my poofs. The two tone thing (like the purple Barbie) takes more design savvy to pull off, but I think it looks really cool.

candylayoutwatermark

When looking at coverage, I’ll sometimes lay out my candy so I can see how I’m doing. You want to make the front and sides as symmetrical as you can. It looks crummy if it isn’t. The back is the back, so it’s kind of fair game to kind of have it a little messy. But for the front and sides? Yeah. Matchy matchy. It also helps, I think, to establish a pattern.

9. Start slapping glue on there. Apply some, not a lot, of glue to your candy. Press it to the foam and hold for maybe 5 seconds.

midglueingwatermark

Sometimes you end up with weird little holes peaking out inbetween your candy. My recommendation is to take some of that tissue paper and dab a little glue on it. Use a lollipop stick to poke it inbetween you candy to cover up the styrofoam. Honestly, you’ll see the gaps and no one else will, but this is a cheap and easy fix. You could also use small candy like the Jolly Rancher. My finished dress also has zots turned on their sides glued in. I think it make it look like little bow/tufts on the side.

10. Once you’ve filled in all your gaps, your dress is complete! Give it a once over and see if anything is loose. A little extra gluing won’t hurt, especially if it needs to travel somewhere else. Once this is done, take the cake round, hot glue the tissue paper to it, and glue it to the bottom of the dress, tissue paper color side up. Make sure you leave the center 2″ free of glue so Barbie’s shoes don’t get glued down. This is your base.

That’s it! At this point, you have a finished Barbie cake! Ta da! You did it!

dressturngif

Once the candy is devoured, Barbie can be slipped out and played with separately and the cake (if not too beat up) might live to be another dress. Play around, see what kind of color patterns you like and most importantly – HAVE BACKUP CANDY. You might get hungry while you work. It’s part of the design process. Happy crafting!

15 thoughts on “How To Make Your Own Barbie Candy Dress Cake

  1. […] update posts, but since so many have requested a how-to for the Barbie cake, I have made one. You can check it out on this blog post. Thanks for your interest, […]

    • Not being very crafty, I am trying to figure out making the curve for the dress. I don’t quite understand the guide, or how you are cutting it, to make it come out rounded. Any hints?

      • I was cutting it! We used a serrated knife and just started shaving off pieces to make the rounded edge. I wouldn’t cut into it… Shallow grazing on the top to form the curve will keep the styrofoam from breaking off or making a jagged edge.

  2. Very cool idea! Hadn’t heard of these before.. You could really get creative with this. 🙂

  3. […] here on It’s Casual Friday for the supplies and […]

  4. […] however, by shaping the candy to look like a Barbie doll’s dress rather than a bunch of flowers. It’s Casual Friday shows you how it’s […]

  5. Shatwon Janae Anderson

    Yes hello I am Shatwon Anderson and I am wondering how much do a Barbie bouquet go for? Because I want to make a business out of it.

    • I gotta be honest – it’s been years since I made one. Like a lot of crafting projects I feel like it’s hard to charge what your time is worth. $50 would probably cover the candy/Barbie and some of your labor. Good luck!

    • I bought my candy at Dollar Tree and you will have less than $10 in candy. I Was able to make it for less than $20 with doll, candy stroke and all.

      • Nice! The dollar stores near where I lived never had any good candy, but I’ll totally check out Dollar Tree next time I’m working on one of these.

      • How Are you getting $20 or less. the cake foams are costing me 11.99 ea. @ best using a 50% coupon 2 x $6 is still 12.00 , $8 for a barbie and at least $5 worth of candy… Using the candy shown in pic. I’m getting $25 not including labor…

  6. I ended up making one of these but had the hardest time getting the shape right. I ended up getting a Styrofoam round. I see now why you use the cake dummies, because I had to remove the legs. I want to try again with the cake dummies.
    My question is could you give me some ideas of candy choices to use.

    Thanks

    • Hi Anita! It is tricky and a lot of work but they’re SO COOL it’s really worth it.

      Here’s a list of candies I recommend. They’re ones I’ve used previously and I think they give enough variety of size and colors that you can get a good mix for a pretty dress. Bite size unless otherwise noted.

      -Laffy Taffy Ropes (these are so easy to use for edging, just give them a bend in the store, make sure they bend and don’t break) (which means they’re really old, ha ha)
      -Laffy Taffy
      -Airheads (regular or bite size work, I’ve gotten bite size at the dollar store before)
      -Lollipops: Tootsie Roll Pops (regular and mini), Blow Pops (these are cool because you don’t even have to glue, if you don’t want, just stab the stick into the foam, it will give way and stick out of it)
      -Those strawberry bonbon candies with the gooey center (they actually make them in a TON of colors, check at a bulk food store to see if they have them. I would take the little tuff on the top and just glue it to one of the sides)
      -Candy in bags like M&Ms (can make for cool, poofy dresses. I used to outline them with a Laffy Taffy rope, it looks like one of those big flowing southern belle dresses)
      -A big lollipop (like one of those with the swirl that are like 4″ across can get put in behind the Barbie’s back and you can glue candy to it to make like a peacock fan behind her. Or wings. It’s hard to describe, let me know if you want a visual)
      -Pretty much anything Wonka makes that isn’t filled with powder
      -Bubble gum (but not the stuff with the wax paper covering it like Double Bubble, this will never hot glue)

      WHEW that’s a pretty good list! Good luck to you and let me know if you need more info.

      • Hi my name is Brenda and I love your Barbie doll candy bouquets and I would love to try and make one but my question for you is after you cut the hole out in the styrofoam for Barbie do you hot glue the Barbie doll to the styrofoam?

      • Hi Brenda! I don’t glue the doll in. This allows it to be taken out easy and played with. Sometimes the candy sort of wedges her in place. 🙂 Let me know if you have more questions!

Leave a reply to Shatwon Janae Anderson Cancel reply