Well, two of you asked for it.
Et, Voila! The cookie press.
For Karen and Johanna I've violated my picture free zone.
It's OK.
You know I'll want to post a picture of my teapot when it's finished... and those Celtic Crosses...
Now are you impressed?!
I am, in fact, quite impressed.
ReplyDeletevery beautiful. I bet you could sell those....i'd sign up for one.
ReplyDeleteAh, but the cost factor! At 3-4 hours... you'd be looking at $40- $50! Probably too dear to consider trying to sell.
ReplyDeleteI am very impressed. Those look awesome!
ReplyDeleteI never would have thought to make something like that. Next 'play with clay' session at the in-laws, I will definitely make one of those.
Well done.
Oh, and $40-50 seems like a reasonable price in one of those fancy kitchen stores.
Looks Yummy
ReplyDeleteCan we expect a special sampling at small group this week?
: )
ReplyDeleteKnowing you, you will share those little cookie darlings with the entire Body....can't wait for "Open House at the Friesen's" ;-)
ReplyDeleteuh oh...open house...now the pressure's on!
ReplyDeleteWhy couln't we make something fun like that in school? I'm looking forward to seeing the teapot. My school teapot was about ten feet thick. Not very dainty, but there will be no water leaking out of that thing! Cookies look beautiful - you could sell those and keep the great press.
ReplyDeleteIf you did market it, you could make some "cookie presses" but you could get more milage by also calling them "The Meatloaf stamper", "The Mashed Potato Snow Flake Stamp" or "The play dough Press"..... mashed potato's would be a bear to clean out of that, but you wouldn't need to put that on the packaging.
ReplyDeleteThat's GOOD Laura.
ReplyDelete:-)
Oh and i forgot to say - that's reaaly cool cookie press by the way!
ReplyDelete