Trick or Treat! Ghost Cake Topper
Today I'm going to show you how to make the CUTEST Halloween Cake featuring a sweet Ghost Cake Topper and easy pumpkin patch border! This cake is perfect for kids' Halloween parties!
This cake design is perfect for any skill level of cake decorating! Even if you've never created a cake topper before, this is a great place to start. This is one of our favorite festive Halloween cakes, and was one of the first Halloween cakes that we added to our site. So much fun!
Table of Contents
How to Make a Halloween Ghost Cake Topper
For the ghost's head, I compressed/molded a (22g.) Rice Krispie Treat into a ball approximately 1 ¼ inches wide. Then, I dipped the end of a lollipop stick into a little melted candy melts and drove the stick into my rice cereal ball.
Doing this just helps to keep everything where it belongs. (If you would rather, you could do the same thing with a ball of gum paste or fondant and allow to dry firm.
I just love how quickly rice cereal treats can be molded to create a firm shape. Plus, it's an excuse to keep rice cereal treats around the house!).
Next, I snipped a piece of 20 gauge floral wire in half and wrapped it around the lollipop stick until secure. I hooked the ends so that my ghosty could hold onto her candy bucket.
You do not have to use 20 gauge wire....just choose something that will be stiff enough to hold it's shape. The wire serves as "ghost arms"...and also will help to give a little movement to our ghost costume.
I smoothed a little fondant over the rice cereal treat ball. This is optional, but helps if you feel that your cereal ball is a bit lumpy.
Next, I took fondant with some tylose mixed in (gum paste would be great too, as well as a 50/50 mix of fondant and gum paste) and I rolled it nice and thin....I then draped it over the "lollipop body" we've made.
Do a little trimming until your fondant drapes just how you like.
Now, for the candy bucket! I had some candy pumpkins that we'll talk about a little later. I just lopped off the top, brushed with a little piping gel so that my sprinkle "candy" would stick, and then pushed a "u" shaped wire (ends dipped in candy melts) into it.
The handle of the bucket easily hangs from the hooked hands that we made earlier. Then, for a little something extra, I added fondant shoes and a bow. The shoes make our ghost look more like a little girl dressed up in a costume rather than an actual ghost that's hungry for candy!
The eyes are drawn on with a food coloring pen....and I decided to draw a face on our pumpkin bucket too!
I used my ghost within a few hours of making her, but for best results...allow to dry for a couple of days. She'll be less fragile.
Now our sweet ghost topper topper is finished!
One of the most important things about the topper is the anchor. I like an extra long anchor, and so I snipped a drinking straw to the approximate height of the cake or so, and slid the lollipop stick anchor right into it. Easy! Now our little trick or treater can stand up straight. ;0)
How to Make an Easy Pumpkin Patch Cake Design
Now that our ghost is ready, let's add some personality to the sides! Today, I did this with a bag of Mellocreme Pumpkins. They remind me a little of Candy Corns as far as texture, in case you haven't seen them. Anyway, these made for a super quick pumpkin patch scene.
I simply sliced the candy pumpkin in half..
Then, I pressed the pumpkins into the sides of my buttercream-frosted cake. (Use a little buttercream as glue if your frosting has crusted over.) *Use any buttercream that you'd like. We used our delicious Classic Vanilla Buttercream Recipe.
After frosting the cake, we allowed it to crust for a few minutes and then smoothed over it with a simple Viva brand paper towel. (We use Viva brand because it has no quilting or impressions.) You can smooth however you'd like!
For the buttercream leaves we used a Wilton 352 leaf tip, and then for the vines we used a small round Wilton 2. (Any small round tip will do!)
Our pumpkin stems are simple brown jimmies.
This pumpkin border was so much fun... it only took a few minutes! That's my kind of decoration.
Now let's take a look at the big picture!!!
More Halloween Cakes
We have SO many more Halloween Cake tutorials and videos to share! Don't miss our roundup of the BEST Halloween Cakes HERE!: Best Halloween Cake Designs and Ideas!
We would also love for you to check out our collection of favorite FALL RECIPES! We have everything from pumpkin cake recipes and spice cakes to caramel cakes, gingerbread cake, and more!
You can find them all here: Sharing the BEST Cake Recipes for Fall!
I hope that you enjoyed this tutorial, your friends and family are sure to love this fun design!
Ok I tired it...while it's not as good looking as your's it's pretty cool. If you click on my name you can see it.
I have my ghost made. It looks pretty good so far. Can't wait to do the rest.:-))
This is so cute. I was watching KHQA.com today on internet. They had reporter in a bakery doing Halloween Cake Decorating. I have made three Fall cakes so far this week for our cake walk at the fall festival and i have made 48 cupcakes that I will decorate on Saturday. This ghost cake is adorable. I made the pumpkin cake they had on KHQA today and it turned out so cute. Cake decorating is in my blood. I cannot wait to try to make the little ghost.
I made two of these wonderful little ghost cakes. One went to my husband's work. The people in the office were reluctant to cut it, because it was too cute! The other went to our family hayride, bonfire, cookout. It was a hit with everyone, but my thirty year old son was this cake's greatest admirer!
Janet, so glad to hear that you made two ghost cakes and that they were a hit! Thanks to everyone else whose comments I am just now seeing! It's so nice to hear feedback from tutorials!! ;0)
Such a cute cake!
Beyond adorable!! Love, love, love this!
Hi Melissa,
As usual, this is super cute and I love it. I have a couple of questions:
1. Do you think a cake pop would work or would the fondant be too heavy?
2. Can you think of an alternative to the wire? I'd like to make these as cupcake toppers and I'd like the kids to be able to eat them too and am concerned about the kids trying to eat the wire. (maybe I'm paranoid??)
Thanks!
Melissa, you are so awesome! Thank you
Love this cake.. I am a newbie to your site, am making this for this Saturday. I don't understand the straw anchor reference. Could you explain that?
Hello Kathy-- I'm glad that you are making this! The lollipop stick in this design not only acts to support the arms and head, but it also is longer than the figure itself. This is good because it acts as an anchor and holds the topper in position, so that our ghost won't tilt to the right or left. Sometimes, my anchor just isn't as long as I'd like. When this happens, I slide a thin cocktail/stir straw over the lollipop stick to elongate it. If you cut the straw to the height of the cake, it will not only keep the ghost anchored, but it will keep it from sinking. In this case though, the ghost isn't very heavy and so that probably wouldn't be much of a concern. (For heavier cake toppers, I always cut a straw...usually a wide bubble tea straw, to the same height as the cake a place directly beneath the figure to prevent it from sinking.)
Hope this answers your question!
@Jen--I'm sorry that I missed your question! I think that the cake pop idea could work. If the fondant seems a little too heavy and you are worried about the cake balls sliding down the stick, you could slide a marshmallow or gum drop up the stick so that it is just beneath the cake ball. This will help to keep the cake ball in place (I've done this before with mini cupcakes on sticks) -
As for the wires-- I think that this could work. Since you will be using small pieces of white fondant, I think they are more likely to hold their shape. If you form them around a lollipop for instance to get the shape of the head, and then remove the lollipop, and stand them up to dry, they may stay. If not, you may have to fill the ghosts with bits of paper towel or place back onto the lollipops until they firm up some more.