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How to Preserve a Candy Portrait
User-Contributed Project
This project guide is not managed by MAKE staff.
Preserve candy so that you can make a portrait out of it without the candy deteriorating.
- Author: Andrew
- Time required: 2 hours+
- Difficulty: Moderate
Let’s say that you were overzealous with your Halloween candy purchases this year (or maybe trick-or-treater traffic was down in your neighborhood) and now you have a big bag or two of candy that you don’t really want to eat. And then let’s say that there is someone you’ve been meaning to make a sweet portrait of, like, for instance, Abraham Lincoln. Well, then; boy, do I have a project for you.
I was recently asked to make a portrait of Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin out of Nerds candies. In order to make the portrait I had to figure out how to adhere the candy pieces to a panel and protect them from moisture which would eventually make the candy deteriorate. Then I had a whole bag of Halloween candy that I didn’t particularly want to eat, so I made a portrait of Abraham Lincoln out of it for my apartment. Here is the process I used to adhere and preserve the candy so that you can make your own candy portrait with your left-over or unwanted Halloween candy.
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Edit Step 1
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How to Preserve a Candy Portrait
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Design a portrait to make out of your left-over Halloween candy (or find candies that are the right color and size to make the portrait). Softer candy containing more moisture will deteriorate more quickly than harder candy, so keep this in mind when you pick which candy you will use. Make sure that your design will fit properly onto your wood or Masonite panel.
You may also want to make sure your panel is the right size and shape to fit into a frame. If you are going to frame your portrait, leave room around the edge of it to glue a frame to the panel when you are done.

Edit Step 4 ¶
After you finish gluing your candy to the panel, coat the entire exposed surface of your candy portrait with clear polyurethane varnish. You may want to apply more than one coat to make sure that the varnish covers the surface completely; this will also help the candy stick to the panel.
Contact with moisture will eventually cause candy to deteriorate so the purpose of this process is to insulate your candy from moisture as much as possible.
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do your pieces need to stay in air conditioned environments as well? archivally speaking how long do you think the work will last, is there any danger of the candy melting or decomposing within its polyurethane shell?