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Craftsy – Online Deal

One, Three, or Five Online Food-Making Classes (Up to 60% Off)

from$19
Buy
No Longer Available
Tue Dec 11 05:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$40
Discount
53%
You Save
$21
  • T460x279
  • Always Learning
  • Kitchen Couture

In a Nutshell

An online database houses high-definition video classes that teach cake decorating and cheese, bread, or jam making

The Fine Print

  • Expires Jun 5, 2013
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. Valid only for option purchased. Online registration required. Valid online only. Must activate by the expiration on your Groupon.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

There are few better ways to demonstrate how much a person means to you than giving them a handmade gift or slashing their tires so they can never leave. Express your affections through cooking with this Groupon.

Choose from Three Options

  • $19 for one online food-making class (a $39.99 value)
  • $49 for three online food-making classes (a $119.97 value)
  • $79 for five online food-making classes (a $199.95 value) An online video community features acclaimed instructors as they teach a variety of food-making classes in such disciplines as cake decorating, bread making, and jam or marmalade jarring. Each class is comprised of multiple high-definition videos for convenient step-by-step learning that participants can watch as often as they’d like. Students also can ask the instructor questions and upload photos for personalized responses, talk to other people taking the same class, and access supporting materials.

Craftsy

Instructor Joshua John Russell sketches a cake design inspired by modern fashion, then demonstrates how to imprint fondant to mimic lace, corduroy, and crocodile skin and how to pipe icing into swirls and puffy pearl-like shapes. His students follow along, step by step. Yet those very students are spread across the country, learning from their own kitchens, dressed in their own aprons and footie pajamas. That’s because Joshua’s class, Fashion-Inspired Fondant, is part of the Craftsy library.

A website devoted to dabblers and hotshots in knitting, baking, quilting, jewelry making and other fun and expressive media, Craftsy has produced more than 90 instructional videos taught by accomplished crafters. Once students purchase a class, they can view it whenever and as many times as they’d like, rewinding to rewatch a particularly intricate skill, bookmarking favorite moments for later perusal, and pausing to look at family photographs one last time before folding them into origami roses. Craftsy supplements its regular classes with smaller-scale workshops, downloadable project patterns, and a gallery of projects for inspiration.

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Dog-Show Breed Standards

With billions of viewers and ad revenue through the roof, it’s no secret that everybody loves watching dog shows. But what do they judge these pedigreed pooches on? Hint: the things in this guide:

1. Is the Dog Crying? A sad dog is never a winning dog. An exemplar of the breed should be happy and boisterous, not a gross crying mess. Plus, the only dogs even capable of crying are genetic aberrations.

2. Has the Dog Eaten a Judge’s Finger During the Process? Only one dog (a mastiff named Grandmaster Waddlesplint) has ever won after consuming a judge’s finger. (It was only a pinky.)

3. General Dogliness: Is this really a dog? Not a pile of ants or a popular wooden toy? How much of a dog is the dog? Like, way dog or just some dog? This is generally the most important.

4. Telepathy Test: No dog has ever passed this test, but judges are holding out hope.

5. Pick Your Favorite: None of this matters. The judges just pick their favorite dog.

Is that dog really a dog?