View allAll Photos Tagged Gingerbread
I normally bake german Stollen for everyone in the family at Christmas but this year I fancied a change and made some Gingerbread houses. This is the result!
Gingerbread: the final frontier. These are the voyages of the Gingerbread Enterprise. It's continuing mission: to explore strange new treats. To seek out new candy and new confections. To boldly go where no cookie has gone before!
FREE INSTRUCTIONS www.ky-ebricks.com/product-page/gingerbread-enterprise-in...
#3 in Explore.
This seems to be all the rage right now, so I thought I'd give it a shot too. Blog entry here.
December 3rd is International Day of Persons with Disabilities, and here's a gingerbread person who isn't remarkable at all.
While it's technically a new Apple commercial touting their accessibility features, the soundtrack and video released today are utterly rousing, and the lyrics are on-point. "I'm Not Remarkable" by Kittyy & the Class:
I had alot of fun with these! I love gingerbread men...they're my favorite Christmas icon. I do gingerbread men every year, but I've only done the faces and the squiggles...I thought I'd have some fun with them this time!
Faces were definitely inspired by Myri and the amazing gingerbread cookies she did last year.
St. Peter's Episcopal Church in Cape May, New Jersey. St. Peter’s is one of the smallest buildings anywhere to have the honor of a National Historic Landmark listing. Its history is complex, and its architect and builder are still a mystery despite years of research by church members and historians. The diminutive building merits the unusual distinction of having been moved six times since its arrival at the Point! Most of the moves were to save it from washing out to sea.
Gingerbread (or in Norwegian, 'pepperkake') is a quintessential feature of the Norwegian holiday season. Minnesota, with its large Norwegian-American heritage, gets in on the fun, too! The Norway House in Minneapolis hosts their annual Gingerbread Wonderland. This year it has about 250 structures created by professional bakers as well as gingerbread enthusiasts of all ages and abilities. The rules are simple: the structure must be made of gingerbread, and all parts of the display (except for any fairy lights) must be edible.
Gingerbread decorating today; these are Sophie's. Mine looked like a badly organised gingerbread zombie apocalypse.
Baked/made those Gingerbread Christmas Trees the other day. :) So fun and easy to make. Have a lovely up-coming weekend everyone!
Koinis 2007 mark I with 50mm f/0 G -lens
My first attempt at making a gingerbread house!
About 27 parts!
(+1,000 views in photostream!)
bighugelabs.com/scout.php?mode=history&id=13389572015
[...] Hansel : Most people say witches aren't real, the stuff of fairy tales. Then one day they show up at your door, they eat your kid, that’s where we come in [...]
-- Quote from "Hansel and Gretel" movie
Nikon D200, Tokina 12-24 f/4, 12mm - f/8 - 1/30s - HDR 5xp +2/-2EV - Cokin Grad Tobacco P Filter.
Rome, Italy (June, 2013)
My Gingerbread Houses is from Johanna's Christmas, A Festive Coloring Book by Johanna Basford, colored with Prismacolor Premier Verithin and Soft Core Colored Pencils and blended with light colored pencils.
Merry Christmas!
Fill the house with festive cheer with •the most wonderful soft gingerbread cookies ever• !
I assembled this gingerbread house from IKEA. I used royal icing for the first time, and hence you can see the messiness. It was however a great project, unfortunately the house collapsed overnight, it became soggy. I really am not sure how to keep it fresh. So I wanted to click some more pics the next day, but this has already fallen by the time I did that.
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Still not done...have to add a few more things....This is the first time I've ever built anyting with gingerbread. Pretty fun stuff to work with. On a mushroom kick today.
Gingerbread (or in Norwegian, 'pepperkake') is a quintessential feature of the Norwegian holiday season. Minnesota, with its large Norwegian-American heritage, gets in on the fun, too! The Norway House in Minneapolis hosts their annual Gingerbread Wonderland. This year it has about 250 structures created by professional bakers as well as gingerbread enthusiasts of all ages and abilities. The rules are simple: the structure must be made of gingerbread, and all parts of the display (except for any fairy lights) must be edible.