Sunday, March 27, 2016

An Easter Ice Cream Party (Free Retro Ice Cream Printables)


Happy Easter!


Kana here.  It's really rare that all of us get together for a party like this, but we said we'd have an ice cream party last week, and so we did.  It's a little cold, but when has that stopped us before?


We have some other snacks, but really, we're just showing off all the ice cream that we got recently.


It helped that the human finally made us an ice cream freezer for all that ice cream we bought.  We didn't want to keep it out because it always looked like it was going to melt, and as nice as the ice cream truck is, it didn't have a freezer.   What an oversight, huh?


The freezer is made entirely of foam core, with a sliding clear doors on top so you can see what ice cream is inside.  All the ice cream not in holders are in retro wrappers (download here).  The freezer is decorated with some vintage signs.  There's more storage under the top shelf through a door in the back.

Lily:  Here's your milkshake.
In other news, Lily is not allowed to serve ice cream anymore...

Kana:  What are those bottles and
what did you put in here?
Lily:  Nothing...
(The grey one is Veritaserum...)
For the record, the ice cream truck is not a potions lab and NOR SHOULD IT BE.
(Knowing Lily and our human, that truck is going to become a mobile laboratory...)

Shepard:  So, pre-packaged commercial
ice cream it is!
To the ice cream freezer!


Now, more about the new freezer in excruciating detail:  it's 8.5" tall, 9" wide, and 5" deep.  The actual storage part is only 7.75" tall, and is divided into two sections.


The top section has a clear plastic front and sliding doors on top.  It's 3.5" tall, which makes it just tall enough for the popsicle holders that come with the OG ice cream truck.  The doors slide in both directions so you can get all the ice cream in and out.


For more storage, the second section is accessible through the pair of plastic doors in the back.  It opens up to a 2.5" deep shelf for the shorter things (like the sundaes).  The two shelves in the back are approximately 2" tall each, and the front portion is a full 4" tall for the milkshake glasses.


And inside, we have all the ice cream still in its packaging (and thus no risk of potion roulette.  Thanks Lily...).  These are all 1950s-1960s vintage wrappers, resized to fit the ice cream that comes with OG ice cream truck.  OK, the cyclone logo is probably more recent.


You can print these on normal paper (and for the drumstick, you want normal printer paper), but to get the right texture for the bags, you can print them on tissue paper.  The human used the tissue paper that came inside the AG boxes from the last batch of toys.

Get a piece of tissue paper roughly 10"x7.5" (a little smaller is ok), and tape it to a piece of printer paper or cardstock.  You'll want to tape it down around all the sides or it will cause a paper jam.  (Also, a laser jet printer will melt scotch tape.  The human learned that one the hard way.)  Then load the paper in as you normally would, and the printer should print on the tissue paper.  The human hasn't tested with an inkjet printer, so it might not work as well.  Ink absorbency with different papers isn't an issue with laser jet printers.


Ice cream sandwiches and cyclones


All sorts of popsicles!


Twin pops!

4 comments:

  1. It's a super cool freezer! Thanks for giving the measurements and for the printables!

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  2. Wow! Amazing work! And, yes, thank you!

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  3. Wow! Your freezer is amazing! Thanks for sharing the printables!!

    ReplyDelete