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Free Cake Decorating MasterCourse | British Girl Bakes
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Free Cake Decorating MasterCourse | British Girl Bakes

From fitting tall cakes into short boxes to piping perfect decorations without any fancy tools, these 10 cake decorating skills will save you time and make your cakes look more professional.

Each of these cake decorating skills is simple to learn and uses tools or materials you probably already have at home. These techniques will help you build confidence and improve your results right away.

1. Cake Decorating Skills for Tall Cakes and Short Boxes

If your cake is too tall for your box, here’s the hack you need! Don't buy extra tall cake boxes just for an occasional tall or tier cake. Instead, use the boxes you already have! To make the cake fit, cut two diagonal slits into opposite sides of the lid. The shorter the slits, the taller the box will become. Push the middle flap (between the slits) inside the box, leaving the outer flaps on the outside. This raises the lid enough to cover your tall cakes neatly without crushing your decorations.

Modifying cake box to fit tall cakes and show off your cake decorating skills without damage

2. No Tools? Try These Hacks for Cake Decorating Skills

No tools? No problem! You can still achieve smooth, professional-looking frosting and piping.
Use a ruler instead of a cake scraper by resting the short end on your turntable or cake board. Push down as you press the edge gently against the cake and spin the board. For a makeshift turntable, use the ring from under your microwave plate.

Cake decorating skills for smooth frosting with a ruler

And to add piped details even if you don’t have piping bags or tips, fill a ziplock bag with buttercream. Snip off one corner and pipe dots, lines, or messages!

Piping buttercream decorations with a ziplock bag

3. Make Your Own Stencils for Easy Custom Designs

Instead of buying expensive cake stencils that you’ll probably only use once, make your own!
Draw your design or message onto parchment or wax paper and cut it out, keeping the paper around it in one piece. This will become your stencil.

To use stencils on cakes you'll need a 'crusting' buttercream, like my 4 Minute Buttercream. Chill the frosted cake for at least an hour before using your stencil. Wrap it around the chilled cake and then spread frosting over it, working from the outer edges towards the middle. This stops frosting from sneaking underneath.

Homemade parchment stencil wrapped around cake

Scrape off the excess frosting with an offset spatula, palette knife or cake scraper. Then peel away the stencil and admire your perfectly neat design!

Buttercream spread over stencil wrapped around cake

4. How to Turn Cupcakes into Mini Cakes

Mini cakes are trendy, fun, and easy to make without buying special pans. Just bake cupcakes and peel off the wrappers to make easy mini cake layers! Optionally, slice them in half to create extra layers for more layers of filling in between.

Layered mini cakes made by cutting and stacking cupcakes, ready for any cake decorating skills you'd use on a larger cake

Spread some buttercream onto your cake board as glue to hold the first cupcake in place. Assemble the cake and then chill it in the fridge for 30 minutes (or the freezer for 15) before frosting. The cold, firm buttercream stops the cake sliding around or tipping over while you decorate.

5. Fixing Runny Frosting with Textured Buttercream Techniques

We’ve all added too much milk or cream cheese to buttercream and ended up with frosting that’s too runny to smooth. Instead of starting again, skip the smooth frosting and choose texture instead! Try twisting the back of a spoon gently over the surface of your frosting to create soft arcs:

Adding texture to runny frosting with a spoon

Another option is to press it lightly against the cake while spinning to imprint horizontal grooves, like eon my Banana Layer Cake. These rustic, textured designs are just as beautiful as smooth frosting.

6. Toothpick Tricks for Neater Designs and Messages

A toothpick is one of the most underrated cake decorating skills you can learn. Use it to sketch outlines before filling with piping, using the pointillist technique. Or fill the outline with frozen buttercream tiles to create a mosaic cake design.

Using a toothpick to cake decorating skills like piping look neater, by creating an outline before filling with buttercream dots
Filling a design on a cake with frozen buttercream tiles

For messages, trace the letters with a toothpick first to make sure they’re centered on the cake. It’s a small step that makes a big difference in how neat your message looks.

7. Pipe First, Freeze Later: Stress-Free Buttercream Decorating

If you’re nervous about piping directly onto a cake, pipe your decorations onto parchment paper or wax paper first. Swirls, rosettes, or flowers can be piped, frozen for 10 minutes, and then transferred to your cake once they’re firm. This way, you can choose the best-looking ones and place them exactly where you want them. No pressure, no mess, no wasted buttercream.

Piped decorations being frozen before transferring to cake

8. Quick Lunchbox Cakes

Lunchbox cakes are an easy and affordable way to package and transport individual portions of cake. They're perfect for a gift or a surprise school or work lunchtime treat. You could also sell these single portions at a bake sale without needing extra packaging supplies.

Assembling and decorating a lunchbox cake in a takeout container

Start by assembling your mini cake on a small square of parchment or wax paper. Then lift and lower it into a takeout container. Add some piping on top, close the lid, and you’ve got a portable dessert!

9. Homemade Chocolate Toppers for Unique Designs

Make your own edible cake toppers using just melted chocolate! Spoon melted chocolate into a sandwich bag and snip off a small corner. Now pipe a number or letter onto parchment or wax paper. Add a toothpick to the base and pipe a little more chocolate over it to secure it. Sprinkle coloured sugar or sprinkles over the top while it’s still wet. Once it sets, peel it off the paper and push it into your cake. These are fun, colourful, custom toppers that stand upright beautifully.

Chocolate numbers with sprinkles for cake toppers

10. Cake Decorating Skills for Tier Cakes Without the Waste

Tiered cakes look elegant but aren’t always practical if you don’t need the extra portions. To save money and prevent waste, use a styrofoam cake dummy to fake any of the tiers. Attach it to a cake board with a dab of buttercream and chill it to set that 'glue'. Then frost and decorate it just like a real cake. You’ll get all the height and style of a tiered cake without the cost or leftovers. And you can scrape and reuse the dummy as many times as you like!

Decorating a cake with dummy tiers

Cake Decorating Skills and Hacks

I hope you've enjoyed these 10 cake decorating skills that make your life easier and your cakes look better. Tell me in the comments which one you’re going to try next and visit my cake school to learn hundreds more cake-decorating techniques and designs. See you there!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on 10 cake decorating skills:

You’ve spent hours frosting and decorating your cake, only to check on it later and discover cracks in the frosting. If you’re dealing with buttercream cracking, the good news is it’s completely preventable once you understand what’s causing it.

In this tutorial I’ll walk you through three reasons buttercream cracking happens. I'll also show you exactly how to stop it from ruining your cakes.

Buttercream cracking from cakeboard movement

When you first spread buttercream onto your cake it’s soft. I love my 4 Minute Buttercream and use it for all of my cakes! But after about 30 minutes in the fridge or a few hours at room temperature, the surface firms up. This is called crusting. Buttercream loses that slightly sticky texture and sets into a firm outer layer that feels dry when you touch it.

If the buttercream moves after it’s crusted, it can crack. And one of the most common causes of that movement is a bending cakeboard. Thin cakeboards can flex under the weight of the cake, especially when you're carrying it. Even a slight bend can shift the buttercream just enough to cause hairline cracks around the base of the cake.

Cakeboard bending under cake weight causing buttercream cracking after the frosting has crusted

How to prevent this: The easiest fix is to support your cakeboard properly. For a thin cakeboard, hold it with one hand underneath the middle to support the weight of the cake. Even better, use a thicker, sturdier board that doesn’t bend at all. That simple change will prevent the movement that causes buttercream cracking.

Temperature changes can cause buttercream cracking

Another cause of buttercream cracking is temperature shock. Many cake decorating techniques require a cold cake, meaning it needs to sit in the fridge or freezer. When you take the cake back out, it moves from cold to warm suddenly. At room temperature the buttercream and the cake itself expand, but not at the same rate. That difference in how they warm up can lead to cracks forming hours later.

Buttercream cracking due to sudden temperature change from fridge or freezer to room temperature

Cracks don’t affect the taste but are really frustrating when you've spent time and effort making your cake look pretty.

How to prevent buttercream cracking: Avoid moving your cake straight from the fridge or freezer into a warm room. Instead, transition it gradually. Start by moving the cake to a cool room or part of the room, away from direct sunlight. Let it sit there for a couple of hours before moving it into a warmer environment. The slower the change in temperature, the less likely you are to see cracks form in your buttercream.

Stacked cakes without support = cracked buttercream

The final reason for buttercream cracking happens when you stack cakes but forget to add supports.

For tier cakes, each upper tier needs two things:

  1. A cakeboard underneath it that’s exactly same size as the cake.
  2. Some kind of support system in the tier below to hold up that cakeboard.

Without those supports, the top cake will gradually sink into the one below it. After a few hours or during transport, the weight will cause pressure that pushes down through the buttercream, creating visible cracks in buttercream frosting.

Buttercream cracking on tiered cakes caused by lack of proper support between cake tiers

How to prevent this: Use dowels or boba straws as internal supports. Place four or five in the bottom cake in a circle where the top tier will sit. These supports act like legs under the top cakeboard, keeping the weight from pressing directly into the frosting below. As a result, your buttercream stays smooth and crack-free. Check out my tutorial on how to make a tiered cake for more details!

Final thoughts on buttercream cracking

Cracks in buttercream are frustratingly common but preventable once you understand what causes them: movement, temperature changes, and lack of support. Plan ahead by choosing a strong cakeboard, managing your temperature changes carefully, and always supporting stacked cakes properly.

If you’ve got questions or want to share your own cake disasters and successes, leave a comment! I’d love to hear from you!

Now that you know how to avoid buttercream cracking, your cake designs can shine! Visit my cake school to learn hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs with my online courses and memberships!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on why cakes crack:

https://youtu.be/0AkI-Lj9Qag

Use these colorful cake ideas to brighten up your cakes for any occasion! In this tutorial I’ll walk you through 8 fun and creative ways to decorate cakes with colour to make eye-catching showstoppers.

Sparkly Sprinkled Stencil Messages

Homemade stencils are easy, cheap, and so versatile! To create your stencil, write a message or number on parchment or wax paper and then carefully cut it out. Leave the surrounding paper intact, which will be your stencil.

Chill your cake in the fridge for at least an hour to firm up the frosting so it's not soft or sticky. Then wrap the stencil around the cake. Spread buttercream over the stencil, using the same colour or any other colour, and place your cake onto a tray. Then press edible glitter or colourful sanding sugar into the buttercream. The tray will catch any falling sparkles.

When you peel the stencil off, you’re left with a fabulous, glittery message! Tip: Make sure your stencil covers up the cake all the way own to the cake board or wrap a second strip around the base to protect the frosting from stray sprinkles.

Wrapping parchment stencil around cake, spreading buttercream, and pressing colorful sugar sprinkles for stencil design

Watercolour Frosting

Watercolour frosting is one of the quickest and easiest ways to create striking, colorful cake ideas. Start by dabbing different colours of buttercream randomly around your cake. Make sure they blend nicely, since they will mix together. Scrape around the cake a few times to smooth and blend the colours. Then use any leftover frosting you scraped off to fill in gaps. The more you scrape, the more the colours will merge into a dreamy watercolour effect.

Watercolor cake with blobs of colorful buttercream smoothed with a scraper for blended frosting

To take it up a notch, try carving into the buttercream to reveal layers of colour beneath. I teach this technique in my free course on 10 frosting techniques.

Colorful Cake Ideas with Buttercream Stripes

Incorporate multiple colours without blending with buttercream stripes. Start by covering your cake in your first colour and then use a striped cake comb to carve out grooves. Chill the cake in the fridge for 30 minutes (or 15 in the freezer) so the first layer sets. Then pipe or spread your second colour into the grooves.

Use a cake scraper to smooth the frosting but remember to trust the process! It’s fine if you smear the second colour everywhere before you've scraped all of the excess off. Keep going and you'll reveal perfect, clean stripes by the end.

Cake decorated with striped buttercream using a striped cake comb

Checkerboard Cakes

Don't forget the inside of the cake! A checkerboard cake adds a burst of colour with every slice. Use a light-coloured recipe you can tint like my Very Vanilla cake, which you can bake in four 6 inch pans for even checkerboard squares.

Leveled colorful cake layers prepared evenly for checkerboard cake

First, level the layers. Then use cookie cutters (2" and 4") to cut concentric rings from each cake layer. Alternate the rings to create a checkerboard pattern, for example a pink outside, white middle, and pink center. Then for the next layer, reverse the colours:

Step showing how to assemble a checkerboard cake with alternating rings of colorful cake layers for colorful cake ideas

Stack the layers so the colours alternate all the way up. It’s a stunning surprise when you serve the cake!

Assembled checkerboard cake with alternating colorful cake layers.

Colourful Vintage Buttercream Piping

If you love piping or want to practice, vintage cakes are perfect for packing in colour. Choose a rainbow palette or any other colour scheme and experiment with different piping tips to build up layers of ruffles, shells, beads, and scrolls. I go into much more detail in my vintage piping tutorial 🙂

Cake decorated with layered textures using multiple piping bags, colorful buttercream, and different tips.

Colorful Cake Ideas with Sprinkles

This next technique is quick but stunning. Pour multicoloured sprinkles into your buttercream but be sure to set aside a few spoonfuls of plain buttercream first. Spread the sprinkled frosting onto your cake as usual. When you smooth it with a cake comb, some sprinkles may drag and leave trails and that’s what the plain buttercream is for. Just spread it over the trails and scrape again until the surface is smooth. The embedded sprinkles create a fun, festive effect.

Cake frosted with buttercream mixed with colorful sprinkles for a fun look.

Sprinkle-Covered Chocolate Cake Toppers

For an eye-catching cake topper try this sprinkled chocolate trick. Melt chocolate chips in the microwave at 50% power in 30 second intervals, stirring between each. Spoon the melted chocolate into a ziplock bag, snip the tip, and pipe letters or numbers directly onto a plate of sprinkles. Remember to pipe them in mirror image, since you’re working from the back.

For the neatest results, outline each letter or number first and then build up the shape to make it thicker. While the chocolate is still soft, press in a toothpick at the base so it’ll stand upright on your cake. Leave it to set, either at room temp for an hour or about 15 minutes in the fridge. Lift the toothpicks up and press them into your cake for sprinkle-covered chocolate toppers!

Drawing numbers in melted chocolate over colorful sprinkles, chilled with toothpick to make cake toppers.

Multicoloured Homemade Stencil Designs

Stencils are one of my favourite cake decorating techniques and using multiple colours makes them even better. Cut out your own stencil from parchment paper or wax paper and wrap it around a chilled cake. Tint small amounts of buttercream (a cupcake pan is perfect for this!) and spread two or three colours across your stencil. Scrape gently to blend and remove excess buttercream. Peel off the stencil to reveal a smooth, vibrant design that really pops!

Homemade stencil with multiple colors of buttercream scraped to leave multicolored design on cake.

Which of These Colorful Cake Ideas Will You Try?

Whether you love sparkly stencils, textured piping, or whimsical sprinkles, there’s something here for everyone. These colorful cake ideas are perfect for birthdays, parties, or anytime you want a cake that really stands out. Leave a comment to tell me your favourite colourful cake ideas or ask any questions you have! And don’t forget to check out my cake school with my free frosting course or explore more courses and membership options.

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on 8 colorful cake ideas:

After teaching thousands of cake decorators, the most common struggle I've seen is with getting perfectly smooth frosting. So let me introduce your new best friend: a metal cake scraper! This tool is everything you need for smooth, professional-looking cakes.

Why a Metal Cake Scraper Is Worth the Hype

Cake combs (also known as scrapers or frosting smoothers) come in plastic, acrylic, and metal. While plastic and acrylic can smooth frosting well, dropping or knocking them will easily create dings that leave trails on your cake. Metal scrapers, on the other hand, stay perfectly smooth and with my tricks they'll give you perfectly smooth frosting every time!

Prep Your Cake for Smoothing Success

Before you even reach for your scraper, follow these steps to set yourself up for success:

Stack your cake layers carefully, ensuring each sits directly on top of the one below. This will give your cake straight sides. Then chill the cake for 30 minutes in the fridge or 15 in the freezer. This will firm the filling and make the cake less crumbly. Next, apply a crumb coat, which is a thin layer of frosting to trap any crumbs that come off the cake. And finally, chill the cake again to set the crumb coat before adding the final layer of frosting. Again, 30 minutes in the fridge or 15 minutes in the freezer is perfect!

Preparing a cake with straight layers and a crumb coat for smoothing with a metal cake scraper

These steps give your final layer of frosting a smooth foundation and prevent any crumbs from ruining it.

Mastering the Technique with a Metal Cake Scraper

With the right technique, your metal cake scraper will leave a super smooth surface on your frosting.

Start by spreading a generous layer of buttercream onto your cake. Make sure it sticks up above the top edge and goes all the way down to the cake board.

Now line the bottom of the cake board with your scraper at an angle, so it's at a diagonal, not pointing straight at the cake. Use very gentle pressure and let the turntable rotate the cake while the scraper stays still. This helps the metal glide evenly across the frosting.

Using a metal cake scraper to smooth buttercream frosting by scraping and filling shallow areas

Don’t expect perfection after the first scrape! Go around several times and if you see any shallow areas, spread on more frosting and scrape again. If the buttercream has little air bubbles in it or isn't as smooth as you'd like it, use the heat hack below!

Warm Metal Hack: Smoothing Made Simple

To warm a metal cake scraper there are three easy methods. The first is using a blowtorch by briefly passing the flame up and down the straight edge of the scraper. Then rub with a towel to cool it down and pinch to check it's only warm, not hot.

Three methods for warming a metal cake comb: blowtorch, hair dryer, and hot water

The second method uses a hairdryer. This heat is slower but gentler and it distributes heat more evenly. You should still pinch the metal to check the temperature and make sure it's just warm.

The third method is to use hot water. Hold your metal cake scraper under hot running water or pour some into a pan or tray and top your comb into it. Rub the metal with a towel to dry it off and then test the temperature with your fingertips before using.

Now use the warm metal to scrape around the cake and you'll see it leave perfectly smooth frosting behind!

Smoothing buttercream with a warm metal cake comb

An important note: hot metal can discolour your buttercream and cause bubbles under the surface. Always double check you're working with just-warm metal that isn't hot!

Using a warm metal cake comb on buttercream without discolouring frosting

Bonus Benefits of a Metal Cake Comb

I love using tools for multiple tasks to make the investment worthwhile so here's some good news! A metal cake scraper isn’t just for frosting. It scrapes dried buttercream or chocolate from your surfaces without smearing and it's also great for transferring cakes! It slices easily underneath the cake and is wide and sturdy enough to lift cakes up. This makes it possible to transfer cakes from a cake board to a platter or cake stand.

Using a metal cake scraper for cleaning surfaces and transferring cakes to a stand

Final Thoughts: Why You’ll Love Using a Metal Cake Comb

For professional-looking cakes, a metal cake scraper is a cake decorator's dream tool. It creates a smooth finish, withstands wear better than plastic or acrylic, and doubles as both a cleanup and lifting aid. If you aren't happy with the results, chances are you're missing one of the earlier steps in prepping your cake for smooth frosting. Get help with that in my tutorial on how to make layer cakes!

Have questions about angle, temperature, or anything else to do with metal cake scrapers? Ask them in the comments! And please check out my cake school for more decorating techniques and designs!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on how to use a metal cake scraper:

https://youtu.be/k1Brl59pQsc

Buttercream bulging can spoil even the neatest frosting, leaving visible bumps between your layers and pushing out through the frosting. It’s a common issue in cake decorating but with some simple tips and tricks it’s easy to prevent bulges under frosting. In this tutorial I’ll explain what causes these bulges, when they’re most likely to appear, and the simple steps you can take to avoid them.

What Causes Buttercream Bulges?

Buttercream bulges usually show up as rounded bumps around the sides of your cake, just underneath the frosting. These are most common after stacking cake layers with soft or runny fillings like jam, caramel, or lemon curd. As you continue to assemble your cake, the weight from the upper layers pushes down and the filling has nowhere to go except sideways. That’s how you end up with those unwanted cake bulges under frosting.

How to stop buttercream bulging between cake layers

The Secret Weapon: A Buttercream Dam

The best way to stop filling from oozing out of your cake is to start with a buttercream dam. This is a ring of stiff buttercream piped around the edge of each cake layer before adding the filling. It acts as a wall to hold your filling securely in place. This is especially helpful when using looser fillings like curds or sauces that don’t hold their shape well. A buttercream dam keeps everything contained so it doesn’t leak out and cause bulges.

Piping buttercream dams to prevent bulges under frosting

Here are my tips for successful buttercream dams that prevent buttercream bulging. First, your dam needs to be taller than your filling. If the filling comes right up to the top of the dam then as soon as you press the next cake layer down, it’ll squeeze the filling over the top of the wall. Once that happens, the filling starts creeping outward and eventually forms bulges under the frosting.

Why buttercream bulging happens with too much filling or low dams

Secondly, make sure the buttercream you use for the dam is firm enough. If it’s soft like whipped cream or mousse, it won’t hold up under the weight of the cake. A stiff consistency is key here – check out my tutorial on buttercream consistency for more details on this.

How to Stack Cake Layers Evenly Without Bulging

As you build your cake, take your time with each step to make sure each layer is level and straight. This helps avoid extra pressure in certain spots that could cause bulges later. Pipe your buttercream dam around the edge of each cake layer and spoon in your filling so it stays well below the height of the dam. Gently press down on the next cake layer to check that the filling doesn’t spill out. Repeat until your cake is fully stacked.

Pressing cake layers to prevent bulges under frosting

Chill Your Cake to Prevent Bulges in Frosting

Even if your buttercream dams are tall and strong, they’re still soft when freshly piped. Don't move straight on to frosting your cake while everything is still at room temperature. If you do, the pressure of smoothing your crumb coat or final coat can nudge the cake layers sideways, leaving gaps where the filling can creep out.

That’s why chilling your cake before frosting is such an important step to prevent bulging. Once your cake is stacked, place it in the fridge for about an hour or the freezer for 30 minutes. This firms up the buttercream dams and the cake layers so that everything stays in place when you start frosting.

What to Do if Buttercream Bulging Appears Anyway

Sometimes no matter how careful you are, you’ll still spot a bulge sneaking out. Don’t worry! It's not too late to fix it. First, spin the cake to check that it's still stacked straight. If it’s leaning to one side, gently nudge it back into place with a spatula or palette knife. This can realign the layers and reduce some of the pressure that’s forcing the filling out.

Chill cakes to stop buttercream bulging after layering and before final coat

Next, put the cake in the fridge or freezer again. Give it time to set so the buttercream dam and filling firm up and stay in place. Then, spread on the crumb coat. Or, if you had already done the crumb coat when you noticed the bulges, add another layer of frosting now that the cake is chilled. This layer of buttercream helps trap any filling that may have escaped and gives you a clean base to work from. After chilling the crumb coat for about 15 minutes you can move on to your final coat of frosting.

Say Goodbye to Cake Bulges Under Frosting

With just a few simple techniques – using a buttercream dam, keeping your filling low, stacking cake layers evenly, and chilling the cake at key points – you can avoid frosting bulges and keep your cakes smooth. So next time you find yourself wondering, “Why is my buttercream bulging?”, you’ll not only know the answer, but exactly how to fix and prevent it.

When you're ready to take your cakes to the next level, visit my online cake school. You'll find courses to learn step-by-step techniques and designs made for cake decorators with any level of experience!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on Why Is My Buttercream Bulging:

https://youtu.be/lc8fk6f_PYs

Have you ever found the perfect cake recipe but it’s written for the wrong size pan? Maybe it’s a 6 inch cake recipe and you want to make an 8 inch cake, a batch of cupcakes, a sheet cake or even cute little mini cakes instead. That’s where cake recipe conversions come in. Once you know how to scale recipes up or down, you can bake any size cake you like without wasting ingredients or ending up with too much batter.

In this guide I’ll walk you through how to convert cake recipes for different pan sizes, how to adjust baking times, and how to work out exactly how much buttercream you’ll need, too.

How to convert cake recipes

Let’s start with an example. Imagine you’ve got a recipe for a 6 inch cake with three layers. That same recipe can be used to make other sizes of cake:

cake recipe conversions for different cake pan sizes and cupcakes
cake recipe conversions turning an 8 inch cake recipe into a 6 inch cake, cupcakes, or sheet cake
cake recipe conversions for scaling up or down cake recipes

The secret to cake recipe conversions is understanding the volume of the different pans. You don’t need to do complicated equations yourself though – I’ve put together a simple chart that shows how many cupcakes are equivalent to different sizes of cake. Keep this handy and you’ll be able to adjust any recipe without any guesswork.

Cake recipe conversions

Cupcakes4 inch cake(s)6 inch cake8 inch cakeOther
12 cupcakesx 2 (3 layers)x 1 (2 layers)x 1 (2 layers)6x9 inch*
18 cupcakesx 3 (3 layers)x 1 (3 layers)x 1 (2-3 layers)9x13 inch
sheet cake
24 cupcakesx 4 (3 layers)x 1 (4 layers)x 1 (3 layers)9x13 inch
(2 layers) or
1 x 10" cake

* You can use this batter to make a mini sheet cake or for a very thin 9x13 inch quarter sheet cake. Turn a thin sheet cake into a layered cake by cutting it in half and stacking, or cut out two identical numbers to make a number cake like this:

How to make a number cake from a sheet cake by cutting and layering cake numbers

Adjusting baking times and temperatures for cake recipe conversions

Once you’ve worked out which pan you’re using, you’ll need to tweak your baking time. This part is simple:

For deeper cakes, it’s also a good idea to lower your oven temperature to 10°C or 15°F less than the original recipe. This helps the cake bake evenly all the way through without the outside burning.

how to adjust baking time and oven temperature for cake recipe conversions to larger or smaller cakes or cupcakes

It’s always better to check early rather than risk an overbaked cake. For cupcakes, I start checking at around 16 minutes. For small or shallow cakes, I check from 20 minutes, and for wide or tall cakes I start checking from about 30 minutes. Press the top of the cake gently: if it springs back, it’s ready, but if your fingerprint stays, give it a few more minutes. The edges should also just start to pull away from the pan when it’s fully baked.

Checking if a cake is baked with the fingerprint test for cake recipe conversions

How much buttercream do I need?

Running out of buttercream halfway through decorating is incredibly frustrating. Cake recipe conversions aren’t just about the cake batter – you’ll need to scale your buttercream too.

how much buttercream you need for cake recipe conversions with different cake sizes and cupcakes

Here’s a simple guide based on my 4 Minute Buttercream, which makes about 6 cups of frosting (1.5kg). That’s enough to fill and frost an 8 inch cake with three layers. You'll see the ingredient measurements listed for each batch and below that, what you can frost with that buttercream.

6 cups of
buttercream
(1 batch)
approx. 3 1/2 cups
of buttercream
approx. 1 3/4 cups
of buttercream
Butter2 1/2 cups
5 sticks
568 g
1 1/2 cups
3 sticks
339 g
3/4 cup
1 1/2 sticks
170 g
Powdered Sugar7 1/2 cups
2 lb
907 g
4 1/2 cups
1 lb 3 oz
545 g
2 1/4 cups
9 1/2 oz
272g
Salt1/2 teaspoon1/4 teaspoon1/8 teaspoon
Vanilla1/2 tablespoon1 teaspoon1/2 teaspoon
Cream / Milk3 tablespoons2 tablespoons1 tablespoon
Frosts which cake?8 inch (2-3 layers)
or 9x13 inch (2 layers)
6 inch (2-3 layers)
or 9x13 inch (1 layer)
4 inch (2-3 layers)
Frosts how many cupcakes?24-36 cupcakesapprox. 18 cupcakesapprox. 9 cupcakes

Final thoughts on cake recipe conversions

Cake recipe conversions open up so many possibilities! You can now make your favourite recipe in any size or shape of cake and with the right amount of buttercream, too. Whether you’re scaling up for a big party cake, scaling down for a smaller gathering, or turning a layered cake recipe into cupcakes, you’ll have the confidence to get it right every time.

I’d love to know what you’re converting next! Please share it in the comments below. And if you want to take your baking and decorating even further, visit my cake school for online courses and memberships where you can learn hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs.

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on cake recipe conversions:

https://youtu.be/kgK-1xJ3NZQ

Buttercream is a dream to work with, until it isn’t. In this tutorial I'll cover 10 common buttercream problems including cracking, melting, turning yellow, and bursting out of piping bags. With my tips and tricks you'll learn how to troubleshoot every single one and how to fix it so your buttercream is smooth, stable, and perfect for frosting, piping, flavouring, or freezing. I'll be using my 4 Minute Buttercream for all of my examples 🙂

1. One of the most common buttercream problems: air bubbles

Air bubbles happen when too much air gets mixed into your buttercream. This usually happens when mixing on high speed or if your buttercream rests for too long. Air bubbles also appear after chilling buttercream, when it returns to room temperature. If your buttercream looks spongey, it probably has air bubbles trapped inside.

To avoid this, always mix your buttercream on the lowest speed possible. Use a paddle attachment or beater instead of a whisk, since a whisk will beat in more air. But if the bubbles are already there you can stir them out. Use a spatula to stir aggressively, knocking the buttercream against the sides of the bowl to knock the air out. This really helps if your buttercream has been sitting for a while or has just come out of the fridge.

Smoothing air bubbles out of buttercream in a mixing bowl

Use one of my favourite buttercream hacks for really stubborn air bubbles. Scoop out about a third of your buttercream and microwave it for just 10 seconds. Then stir it back into the rest. This melts just enough of the buttercream to mix everything together smoothly, giving you the perfect texture with no air bubbles.

buttercream with air bubbles being microwaved

2. When piping turns droopy: a quick fix for warm buttercream

If your piping looked great at first but then starts to droop or lose its shape, it’s probably because of your hands. Their warmth while you're squeezing the piping bag can soften the buttercream as it starts to melt. This is especially common with flowers and detailed decorations that take a while to pipe and really need to hold their shape!

The fix is simple: put your piping bag in the freezer for one minute. Just one. Any longer and the buttercream will freeze against the metal piping tip, making it too hard to pipe. After a minute, your buttercream will be firmer and you’ll get clean, crisp piping again. Use it with any piping tips, even Russian Tips - get my tips for those in this tutorial.

Buttercream piping bag being chilled to improve piping shape

3. Why is my buttercream yellow?

Butter is naturally yellow so if you’re making an all-butter buttercream, it will have a yellow tint. That’s fine for some cakes but not if you’re aiming for a bright white frosting.

Here’s a clever colour trick: add violet! Take a toothpick, dip it into violet gel food colouring, and swipe just a tiny amount through your buttercream. Violet cancels out yellow and when you've mixed it in, you’ll end up with a bright white buttercream. This is so useful for wedding cakes! Make sure you use a toothpick instead of adding a full drop of violet to prevent turning the buttercream purple.

Adding violet food colouring to yellow buttercream to make it white

4. Oops, a dent! How to fix buttercream problems after frosting

You’ve spent ages smoothing your cake and it’s looking flawless… until someone (maybe you!) accidentally pokes it. It’s one of the most annoying buttercream problems but it’s surprisingly easy to fix.

Whether the frosting is still soft or it's already set, spread a small amount of fresh buttercream over the dent. To smooth it, use a small piece of acetate. This is flexible plastic used for cake decorating and it comes in sheets or rolls. Cut a small square, about 3 inches or 10cm, and gently scrape over the damaged area. It’ll follow the curve of the cake and blend the repair seamlessly into the rest of the frosting. The dent will disappear like it never happened.

Repairing a dented buttercream cake with acetate

5. The piping bag burst again?! Here's how to prevent it

If your piping bag bursts or the tip pops out mid-way through decorating, it’s probably because of how the piping tip was fitted. Disposable piping bags are sealed at the tip so they need to be cut properly to hold piping tips securely.

To prevent bursting bags, drop your piping tip into the bag and push it down to the end. Then score a line halfway up the piping tip with scissors and slide the tip out. Cut along the line you just made and then push the piping tip back down into place. Now the bag will hold it snugly and the tip won’t pop out no matter how much pressure you apply.

Piping tip fitted securely inside a piping bag to prevent bursts

6. The buttercream won’t smooth… now what?

Sometimes buttercream just refuses to get smooth, no matter how many times you scrape around the cake. If your frosting has shallow imperfections or little ridges that won’t go away, use heat to fix it!

Switch to a metal cake scraper and warm it up using a blowtorch, hairdryer, or hot water. Dry it completely so it’s warm and dry, not hot or wet. Now scrape gently around the cake. The warmth will melt the outer surface of the buttercream as you go, filling in imperfections and leaving behind a super smooth finish.

Smoothing buttercream frosting using a hot cake scraper

7. Hot weather buttercream problems: why it melts and how to stop it

If your buttercream melts or slides off the cake, you’re probably working in a hot kitchen or the cake is outside in warm weather. Just like butter melts, all-butter buttercream melts quickly in the heat.

A great way to prevent buttercream from melting is to swap half the butter in your recipe for vegetable shortening. This has different brand names in different countries, like Crisco or Trex. It’s much more stable than butter and won’t melt as quickly.

To keep the same buttery flavour, add half a teaspoon of clear vanilla extract, which gives your buttercream that rich, buttery taste without the sharpness of shortening. You can still tint it, pipe it, and smooth it just like you would with traditional buttercream but it’ll hold up much better outdoors.

Heat-stable buttercream frosting that holds its shape in hot weather

8. Buttercream cracking? This is why

Buttercream cracks when it sets and then gets moved. You’ll often see small cracks appear around the bottom edge of the cake, which are caused by the board bending under the cake’s weight. This can be especially noticeable if you’re using a thin cake board.

To prevent cracks, always support your cake board by holding it underneath with one hand, especially if it’s a large or heavy cake. Even better, use a thicker, sturdy cake board that won’t flex. Once your frosting is set, you want the whole cake to stay still to avoid any shifting or cracking.

Smooth buttercream frosting with no visible cracks

9. How to add flavour without causing buttercream problems

You can absolutely flavour buttercream with all sorts of ingredients! The key is to balance the amount of liquid you add. For anything runnier than buttercream like lemon curd, Nutella, peanut butter or cream cheese, add it one spoonful at a time. Stir and check the consistency after each spoonful so your buttercream doesn’t get too runny.

Adding flavour to buttercream frosting without losing its consistency

You're looking for a texture that’s still firm enough to hold its shape but soft enough to spread easily. If you want intense flavour without adding moisture, try using freeze-dried fruit powders like strawberry or pineapple instead of purées or juices. They add a lot of flavour without affecting the texture at all.

Different ingredients like freeze-dried fruit to flavour buttercream

10. Freezing buttercream the right way

I wish I had known earlier in my cake career that you can freeze buttercream in multiple ways. Whether you’ve got leftovers or you're planning ahead for a cake order, freezing is a great option.

You can freeze buttercream on its own in an airtight container or ziplock bag. Or freeze it already spread between cake layers by wrapping the whole cake tightly in cling film (plastic wrap). You can even freeze an entire frosted cake or even a cake decorated with piping or other buttercream details! To do this, place the cake in the freezer uncovered for about an hour until the buttercream is firm. Then wrap it securely in two layers of plastic wrap and return it to the freezer.

Freezing buttercream leftovers, a cake with buttercream filling, and a cake frosted with buttercream

When you’re ready to use or serve your buttercream cake, transfer it to the fridge the night before and then to room temperature a few hours before serving. Unwrap it as soon as you take it out of the fridge, before the buttercream softens so the plastic doesn’t damage your decorations. Cakes always taste best at room temperature so after taking it out of the fridge, wait at least 2 hours before serving.

Frozen decorated cake being thawed to serve

Final thoughts about buttercream problems

Buttercream can be tricky but with these quick fixes you’ll be able to troubleshoot any issue that comes your way.

To learn even more about buttercream (including how to make it flawlessly, colour it, flavour it, pipe it, frost with it and more) check out my online course The Basics of Buttercream. You'll find that and all of my other online courses on my cake school. I hope to see you there!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on how to fix 10 buttercream problems:

https://youtu.be/Hvz2h_gh6lY

Whether you're selling cakes from home or running a full bakery, of course you'd like to earn more for the time, energy and love you pour into every cake. The good news? You don’t need to work twice as hard to make twice as much. Here are 10 simple ways to make more money selling cakes without burning out and I’ve used all of these strategies myself throughout my cake career, from baking in my kitchen at home to running a busy storefront and helping others grow their cake businesses.

Ready to grow your cake business? Here are 10 tried-and-tested cake business tips to help you increase your prices, sell more cakes, and create extra income streams with your cake skills.

Increase Cake Prices Without Losing Customers

1. Make more money sell cakes with customization

Let’s start with how to make more money for what you’re already doing. To raise your prices strategically, increase the value of what you offer.

One of the easiest ways to do this is through customization. You can charge more when you offer personalized cakes, from names or messages on the cake to specific colour themes or designs for birthdays, baby showers, weddings and other special occasions. As your skills improve, you can offer more advanced styles like sculpted or 3D cakes, double barrel tiers, fondant designs or on-trend looks like vintage piping or comic-style cakes. These extra touches let you increase cake prices compared to offering standard menu options.

10 cake business tips to help decorators make more money selling cakes, stand out, and raise their prices

2. Be unique to reduce competition and increase prices

Next, set yourself apart with something unique. When your cakes look and taste just like everyone else’s, you have to compete on price and that often means lowering it. But if you can offer something others can’t, like rare flavour combinations, fast delivery, or early adoption of trending styles, your prices can go up instead of down. For example, remember the striped cakes of 2019, comic cakes in 2022, or the recent wave of zodiac-themed vintage cakes? Being the only person in your area to offer something unique gives you a huge advantage.

3. Improve your cake decorating skills to make more money selling cakes

Of course, if you want to start offering more detailed or elaborate designs, that might mean improving your cake decorating skills. My online cake school is here to help with that! I teach hundreds of cake decorating techniques and designs in my online courses and you can try everything with a free 7-day trial of my AYCC membership. It’s the easiest way to gain confidence and watch your cakes (and your cake prices) improve.

4. Improve the reputation of your cake business

Don’t underestimate the power of your reputation. Encourage reviews on platforms like Google and Yelp with signs in your shop or stickers on your boxes. Be quick, helpful, and friendly when replying to messages and grow a presence on social media to show potential customers that others already love your cakes. Social proof builds trust and people are willing to pay more when they feel confident in what they’re buying.

Cake decorator building a strong business reputation to grow a cake business and increase orders

Cake Business Tips to Sell More Cakes

Let’s talk about how to sell more cakes without lowering your prices. Yes, dropping your prices could bring in more orders but that just means working harder for the same money. Instead, try these strategies to bring in more sales without reducing prices.

5. Word of Mouth

Word of mouth is free and incredibly effective. Take cakes to events, give them as gifts, or offer one as a prize for a local competition. Reach out to newspapers, magazines, blogs or local online communities to share your story or see if they’d feature your work. I started this way when I ran my home cake business and it really worked! Within a year I had more orders than I could handle and opened a storefront. Check out this tutorial on 10 things I wish I'd known when I first started making cakes!

Cake decorator growing her business by word of mouth by taking cakes to events to get more cake orders and make more money selling cakes

6. Use content creation to grow a following

If you’re into social media, start thinking about content creation. Sharing photos and videos of your cakes can bring in new customers while also growing your audience. Use location tags so locals can find you and post popular themes like Minnie Mouse or Mario cakes so potential customers see something they’d love to order. This is just scratching the surface! Content creation for bakers involves lighting, setup, strategy, editing, and much more. I teach all of this inside Creator Academy - join the waitlist now if you’re curious about building a cake business through content.

Cake decorator using photos and videos of cakes to grow her cake business and reach more customers to make more money selling cakes

7. Network and partner to make more money selling cakes

Networking is another brilliant way to grow. Partner with non-competing businesses like an ice cream shop, florist, or balloon decorator. Recommend each other to customers and create packages or cross-promotions to boost each other’s sales. You’ll be surprised how fast this kind of collaboration can grow your customer base.

Partnering with complementary businesses to cross-promote and increase cake sales, eg a cake shop partnering with an ice cream shop

8. Upsells and add-ons

Upselling is a quick way to make more from each customer. Offer matching cupcakes at a discount when someone orders a cake. Suggest a birthday smash cake alongside an order of cupcakes. And you can upsell decorations on cakes like cake toppers, custom characters, or adding an extra tier. The more you offer, the more you can earn from each order without finding a brand new customer every time.

Cake decorator adding upsells and extras to cake orders to increase overall sales and make more money selling cakes

Additional Income Streams to Make More Money Selling Cakes

Selling cakes isn’t the only way to make money as a baker. If you’ve built up skills decorating cakes, you can use those in other ways to create income streams that complement your business.

9. Teach cake decorating to others

Teaching is one of my favourite examples of how to make more money selling cakes. Host in-person cake decorating classes in your kitchen or at a local venue. Offer online classes on platforms like Zoom. You can teach a specific technique, recipe or full cake design. People love learning from someone with hands-on experience, especially if they've eaten your cakes or seen them on social media.

10. Create and monetize content of your cakes

Photos, videos and blogs can all bring in money if you share them in the right places. You can earn through platforms like YouTube, Instagram, Facebook or even your own website. If you’re already decorating cakes and sharing photos, why not turn those posts into profit? It can be more lucrative than cake sales and you don’t have to choose between the two, you can do both!

I teach everything you need to know to turn your cakes into content in my content creator course. Join the waitlist now and get notified when it becomes available later this year!

Cake decorator growing her following with videos and photos to make more money selling cakes
Cake decorator using content creation to grow her cake business and attract more orders

Final thoughts about how to make more money selling cakes

There are so many ways to grow a cake business, from increasing cake prices to upselling, marketing, teaching and content creation. You don’t have to do all of them at once but each one will take you closer to the income and lifestyle you want from your baking. I hope these cake business tips help you earn more from your cakes while doing what you love. Ask me any questions in the comments!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on how to make more money selling cakes:

From making edible toppers to painting and stamping, there are so many creative things to do with buttercream! In this tutorial I’m sharing 10 fun and unexpected buttercream decorating techniques to inspire your next cake design. I'll be using my 4 Minute Buttercream for all of the techniques in this tutorial.

Pipe and freeze decorations using buttercream

Buttercream has a unique quality that makes it perfect for this first trick. When it’s cold, it firms up enough to hold its shape. This means one of the things you can do with buttercream is pipe and then freeze it to create decorations you can handle like fondant. Pipe onto a tray lined with parchment paper or a silicone mat to make them easy to move later. Then pop the tray into the freezer for 10 minutes to freeze the buttercream. Once the shapes are frozen, you can pick them up and press them straight onto a cake. If your cake has already chilled and the frosting has set, use a dab of fresh buttercream as glue to attach the frozen pieces. This technique is much easier than working with fondant and it looks just as pretty.

Piped buttercream decorations frozen and then added to a cake, showing creative things to do with buttercream for cake decorating

Flat buttercream patterns with Facelift Frosting

Another buttercream technique that’s fun to experiment with is facelift frosting. I came up with this a few years ago and it’s still one of my favourite ways to get a flat, colourful pattern on a buttercream cake.

You start by piping a design onto a crumb-coated cake and then freeze it so the piped buttercream sets firm. Frost over the top and freeze again for 20 minutes to firm up the outer layer. Then take a warm cake comb and scrape around the cake several times. You can warm the comb by holding it under running water or dip it into a pan of hot water. If you have a metal cake comb, use a blowtorch or a hair dryer to heat the edge of it.

As you scrape the top layers of frosting off, the colourful design underneath is revealed. Unlike typical piped buttercream decorations, the details will be completely flush with the surface of the cake. This technique creates such a unique effect!

Facelift frosting technique showing frozen layers of buttercream revealed by scraping with a hot cake comb

Imprinted messages in buttercream

For messages on buttercream cakes, you can definitely pipe them but it takes practice to make them neat. Here’s a cleaner and more precise option: lettering sets. First, chill the cake for at least an hour and then let it sit at room temperature for 30 minutes. Now the buttercream frosting will be softened but still firm instead of sticky. Press each letter gently into the surface of the cake to leave an imprint. Make sure to press all over the letter so it stamps in evenly. Then lift the letters away to reveal a neat message. You can leave it as it is or paint inside the letters using edible metallic paint and a fine brush. If you don’t have store-bought paint, mix vodka with edible gold luster dust for a DIY version.

Lettering set pressed into buttercream cake to create neat words and messages

Sculpted cakes that look like fondant

Buttercream can be used for sculpted cakes that look like they’re covered in fondant. The secret is acetate. This flexible plastic sheet wraps around curved edges to smooth buttercream without leaving lines behind like a regular scraper does. It’s especially helpful for shaping characters or rounded cakes, like this Bulbasaur cake! If your buttercream starts to set or show air bubbles as you work, dip the acetate in warm water. Dry it off and the warmth of the plastic will smooth the buttercream more easily.

Acetate used to smooth buttercream over curved sculpted cake surfaces

Things to do with buttercream as paint!

Painting is another creative thing to do with buttercream. Chill your cake first, so the frosting is firm and will hold its shape as you paint. Tint small amounts of buttercream with gel colours and use a utensil to apply it. A palette knife is a popular choice but you can even paint with a knife, fork, and spoon! The buttercream consistency needs to be quite runny or loose for this technique. I love painting flowers because the shapes are simple and easily recognizable, even if you haven't had much practice painting! You only need a small amount of buttercream on your utensil to paint each shape. Make sure the cake stays cold and firm and if it starts to soften, put it back into the fridge for 15 minutes.

Cake decorated with painted buttercream using utensils for an artistic design

Make buttercream toppers with silicone molds

You can make beautiful cake toppers with buttercream using silicone molds. Instead of fondant or chocolate, spoon buttercream into your molds. Press it down firmly to fill every detail and smooth the surface flat. Freeze the molds for at least 30 minutes so the buttercream is completely solid and then gently peel the silicone away to release the shapes. Work quickly because they’ll soften fast as they warm up! If anything breaks, just press the pieces gently back together and they’ll stick as the buttercream warms up. Press them directly onto the cake for soft, colourful decorations that are completely edible.

Buttercream pressed into silicone molds to create 3D edible figures for cakes

Use the microwave to fix stiff or airy frosting

Buttercream melts when it’s warm, which might sound like a problem but actually makes it super useful for smoothing frosting. If your buttercream is too stiff or full of air bubbles, try this easy hack! Scoop out about a third and microwave it for 10 seconds. Then stir it back into the rest of the bowl. The melted buttercream will loosen the consistency and help knock out stubborn air bubbles. Now it will be easier to spread and smooth onto your cake!

Microwave trick to remove air bubbles and for smooth frosting

Make edible buttercream mosaic tiles

Another fun thing to do with buttercream is turn it into edible mosaic tiles. Spread different colours of buttercream onto a piece of parchment paper and freeze it until the buttercream is firm. Then use a sharp knife to cut it into small triangles. Draw a shape on your cake with a toothpick to use as a guide as you attach your buttercream tiles. Now press the frozen tiles onto the cake to fill in your shape like a mosaic. Decorating takes a while so it's best to freeze two trays of tiles and rotate them. This way you’re always working with cold, firm buttercream.

Frozen buttercream mosaic with colourful triangles arranged into a cake design

Wrap cakes in patterns with buttercream

Buttercream wraps are a clever way to create patterns around a cake, like these wavy stripes. First, spread or pipe your coloured buttercream pattern onto parchment paper and wrap it around your cake. Then put the cake into the fridge for about an hour, until the buttercream is cold and firm. Peel the parchment paper off to reveal the design underneath, which will stay attached to the cake. You’ll probably need to do a few touch-ups to fix any gaps or smudges, by spreading more buttercream over those areas and scraping with a warm cake comb. I teach this full technique in detail in my online course on 10 Cake Decorating Techniques.

Wrapped buttercream cake technique using parchment paper to transfer buttercream designs onto a chilled cake

Practical things to do with buttercream: freeze leftovers!

Finally, one of the most practical things to do with buttercream: freeze your leftovers. If you have extra buttercream in any colour, pop it into a ziplock bag or airtight container and freeze it for up to a month. To use it again, take it out the night before and let it come to room temperature. Once it’s soft you can re-tint it if needed and stir it well to knock out any air bubbles. This saves so much time on your next cake!

Storing leftover buttercream in containers for freezing and thawing to reuse later, showing practical things to do with buttercream

Your favourite things to do with buttercream?

With all these fun and clever things to do with buttercream, it’s easy to see why it’s such a popular choice for cake decorating. What will you try next? Tell me in the comments! And visit my cake school to learn hundreds more cake decorating techniques and designs.

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on 10 things to do with buttercream:

https://youtu.be/qHQr92pKZok

Cake boxes can be surprisingly expensive, especially buying them in different sizes to fit every cake you make. From mini cakes to towering tiered cakes, it feels like you need a whole room full of boxes! But what if I told you that you only need one size cake box for nearly every cake you’ll make? These cake box hacks will save you money and free up storage space.

In this tutorial I’ll show you how to transport cakes safely and professionally using just one kind of cake box. Whether you're delivering a mini cake or a tall two-tier wedding cake, try these simple tricks!

Three different sized cake boxes

Why These Cake Box Hacks Work for Every Cake

It might seem like a mini cake needs a mini box and a tall cake needs a really tall one. But actually, a standard 10 inch cake box can be used for all kinds of cakes. That’s the size I use for everything from 4-inch mini cakes to tall, double-barrelled and tiered cakes.

Why 10 inches? Because most of my cakes are made with 8-inch cake layers and I place them on 10-inch cake boards. When the board fits snugly into the cake box, it won't slide around when you transport it.

Here’s how to use that same 10-inch box for cakes of all sizes and shapes, without your cakes getting damaged during delivery.

Cake Box Hack for Mini Cakes

Mini cakes are adorable and trendy and perfect for small celebrations. But mini cake boxes? Difficult to find and not very practical if you’re trying to save money and space.

Here's how to make a mini cake fit securely in a standard cake box.

Let’s say you’ve made a little 4-inch cake on a 6-inch board. Placing that into a 10-inch box sounds like a disaster waiting to happen, right? It would slide all over the place during transport – definitely not how to transport cakes safely!

Mini cake sliding inside a large cake box without cake box hacks

The trick is to secure the mini cake inside the big box:

Now your mini cake won't budge, even on the bumpiest car ride.

Non-slip mat placed on cake board before placing mini cake board on top

Tip: Always transport cakes on a flat surface like the boot of your car (trunk) or in the footwell in front of the passenger seat. Don't place it on a seat if you can avoid it because the angle can cause the cake to slip.

Cake box placed in car footwell using cake delivery tips

Cake Box Hacks for Tall Cakes and Tiered Cakes

Now for tall cakes, double-barrel cakes, tier cakes, and cakes with toppers that can’t be added later. Most cake boxes are about 8 inches tall, which is fine for single-tier cakes. But if your cake is taller or tiered, the lid will press down on the top of the cake.

Tall tier cake sticking out above standard cake box

Here’s a genius cake box hack that takes less than a minute:

  1. On one side flap of the lid, make a two diagonal cuts from the bottom edge towards the top. Do this on the opposite side of the lid as well. The shorter your cut, the taller the box will become.
  2. Now put the lid onto the box with the middle sections of the lid (in between the two diagonal cuts) tucked into the sides of the box. This lifts the lid up, making the box taller without damaging it.
  3. You can secure the lid in place with a sticker or a bit of tape if you’re carrying the cake outside.
Cutting diagonal slits in cake box lid for tall cake box hack

I’ve used this tall cake box hack to transport two-tier cakes, cakes with tall toppers, and double-barrel cakes. No custom boxes needed!

Cake Packaging Tips for Every Delivery

Whether you’re making cakes professionally or just as a hobby, these cake packaging tips will make your life much easier:

The Bottom Line on Cake Box Hacks

It’s easy to feel overwhelmed by all the different tools and packaging supplies for cake decorating. But honestly, you don’t need dozens of box sizes cluttering up your kitchen or cake studio. With these simple but game-changing cake box hacks you can deliver cakes of all shapes and sizes using just one kind of box.

If you found these tips helpful you'll love the online courses on my cake school. I'd love to help you grow your skills and confidence with cake decorating!

You can also watch a video of this tutorial on cake box hacks to save money:

https://youtu.be/H33KOPZ1PXM
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