I decorate the front of the house for Halloween by making a
big spider web out of yarn. Then I make a big spider out of
two black balloons for head and body, black construction
paper strips for legs and eyes and mouth out of red and
yellow construction paper. All is taped together and tied
to the web. On the Martha Stewart site are nice print-outs
for making luminaries out of paper lunch bags. There are
also print-outs for bats that are glued to clothes pins. We
make the jack-o-lantern and rub cinnamon on the inside tops
so when the candle is burning the scent comes out. And at
garage sales I am always looking for more decorations to
use. -- Maria from CA
For Halloween classroom parties, I bake regular cupcakes and
frost them with white frosting. As a simple decoration, I
push a "spider ring" into each one. The rings are very
reasonable usually about a penny each and the treats look
great on a large platter! Remember to warn young children
about the rings! -- Lorie from IL
Halloween Party Idea: BUY A PUMPKIN LARGE ENOUGH TO FIT A
PUNCH BOWL INSIDE. CUT THE TOP OFF THE PUMPKIN AND CLEAN
OUT THE INSIDE, JUST AS YOU WOULD IF YOU WERE GOING TO
CARVE IT. PLACE THE PUNCH BOWL INSIDE THE PUMPKIN. FILL
WITH YOUR FAVORITE PUNCH RECIPE AND ADD SOME BLACK LICORICE
ALONG THE RIM OF THE PUMPKIN (DANGLING OFF LIKE A SPIDER)!
IT LOOKS REALLY COOL! FOR KIDS AND ADULTS TOO! -- Regina
from IL
For every Halloween, we make a haunted house. You can use
things around the house or make decorations inexpensively. I
made gravestones out of styrofoam or you can paint cardboard
box remnants out. My sayings include...Rest in Pieces, Once
Naughty Son, 1st husband, 2nd husband, Next husband with
dates 1955-? (but soon), C.U.Soon. Be creative! I made a
Bates Motel sign w/scraps and below it states: Vacancy-where
u check in and never check out...,a horror graveyard/haunted
house tape, old masks dressed up or figures wrapped up in
toilet paper for mummies, live teenagers (they love to do
this stuff) dressed as Death with a scitar made of foil.
Note to tame it down when little kids come because they will
get too scared.
I have been room mom for many years and I love Halloween
parties! We even made a haunted house one year for the
school fair. Here are some great games-instead of Bingo
substitute the word GHOST. In fact I cut the bingo cards and
glued them onto a ghost cutout. Also apple dunking (although
schools won't allow because of germs), how many words can
you make out of the word Halloween, Pin the tail on the
black cat (you can make a cutout with glitter collar &
eyes), throw the crepe orange pumpkin balls (made of
newspaper and crepe paper rolled up) into the cauldron,
pumpkin bowling, etc."-- Ellen Marie, CA
Ghost Suckers
What you need:
suckers in wrappers
a black marker
white kleenex, tissue paper or napkins
string or twisters
What to do...
Wrap the tissue around the sucker and tie it in place with
the string or twister. then add eyes and mouth onto the
tissue with the black marker. This is a cute idea and
really easy to do. -- Kellie from PA
Every year at Halloween I
remove all my pictures off one wall in my living room and we
grab some construction paper, glue, tape, and what ever else
we find around the house. And we make pumpkins ghosts (we
trace leaves ) will you get the idea . and make a big
Halloween wall my kids love this! -- Onolee from MI
Use a colored copier. Place
some pictures of Halloween items such as pumpkins or 'cat
witches' on the copier. I get mine from newspapers and
magazines. Duplicate them, cut out the designs and hang on
your porch or throughout the house. You can even use heavier
paper (card stock) and sit them on tables as decorations. --
C. from NV
My favorite Halloween & fall decor is pumpkins- buy fresh,
papermache, ceramic, sewn, any kind of material and decorate
one side for Halloween with a jack o lantern face and leave
the other side plain or tie on fake leaves etc. for your
fall-thanksgiving decor. 2 decorations in one! -- Sheila Ann
from TN
To make Ghosts you will need
cotton balls Kleenex and twisters and felt pens or markers,
take cotton ball and put one kleenex over it and secure a
twister around the neck part and dot the round part for eyes
and mouth, and you have little ghosts to hang with string
any where you want, cute and fun to make. The kids will love
it, and so will moms too. -- Ruth from IL
I saw these both on Martha Stewart last year and loved the
ideas! The first one was putting gummy worms and crawlers
in with your Jell-o molds. The second one was to take a
Halloween mask and tape the eye and mouth holes (make sure
the inside is clean first) then fill it with water and put
it in the freezer. When it is ice take it out a put in in
your punch bowl and now it looks like there is a face
bobbing in the punch. Happy Haunting! -- Kris from AK
Hanging Ghosts in Your Outside Tree!
Supplies Needed:
1 bag fiber fill (found in craft stores)
1 or 2 old clean white sheets cut into pieces of 1 ft x 1
ft.
1 Black Marker Pin
White String
Make a round ball out of the fiber fill and put in center of
1 ft by 1 ft piece of sheet. Wrap the fiber fill like you
would making a head of a doll and tie it at the neck with
string, preferable white string. Then take your black
marker pen and make spooky ghost faces on each of your
ghosts. Hang them on your tree outside you house. A nice
inexpensive way to decorate the outside of your house. --
Valerie from CA
One Halloween tip I find very convenient is that I take the
screen/window out of the top portion of the storm door on
Halloween night. This way, when the little goblins crowd the
door way on their "Trick-or Treat" frenzy, I don't have to
worry about any of them tripping while moving backwards to
clear out of the way of the door as it swings open. I just
dispense treats through the now open upper portion of the
storm door. It keeps drafts to a minimum, maintains some
privacy, especially during dinner, and would probably work
well to corral household pets if we had any. -- Valerie from
NY
Always buy Halloween supplies a year ahead. Your local
stores sell Halloween any other Halloween stuff at great
discounts after the holiday. I've been able to send my
grandchildren gifts as well as my adult children that are
worth 75% more than I paid for them. Baking should start
1-2 months ahead and frozen. This way you won't be rushed
right at the holiday and be able to enjoy every minute of
it." -- Christine from MI
Halloween Fruit Punch
For a Spooky Surprise fill a plain clear plastic glove with
dark purple grape juice. Place in the freezer until solid.
Next, fill a punch bowl with your favorite punch. I use
Minute Maid fruit punch, vanilla ice cream, and 7~up. Place
the frozen hand in the bottom of the bowl, and watch the fun
begin -- Carlie from NJ
Halloween/Party Idea...I can remember participating in an
alphabet party while in high school. It was Halloween and we
had a "T" Party. Everyone came dressed as something starting
with the letter T . It was great and you can choose any
letter of the alphabet for this party. I went as a
"Tramp/hobo" and the best costume award was for the guy
dressed as a Toll Booth. -- Donna from VA