Collection Halloween
Welcome, foolish mortals. Haunted music and monsters are just the beginning—look here for spooky resources.
Halloween is not just a favorite with kids—it’s also a cherished holiday among theater artists. If you want to join in the fun, but aren’t sure how to begin, let these theater designers from around the country inspire your spooktacular Halloween display.
If the prospects of a pumpkin and a carving knife send you screeching into the night, you’re in good company. Tony® Award-winning scenic designer David Gallo insists, “our jack o’ lanterns never look like they do in magazines. Those must be Photoshopped!” David and his wife, Sarah, stopped trying to master the jack o’lantern face and opted for this modern alternative: carve the entire pumpkin (“No need to neglect 3/4 of the pumpkin,” says David) with a simple repeated shape—polka dots, diamonds, fleur-de-lis, hearts, you name it. For safety (and longer life), use battery-operated tealights instead of burning candles. You might stow a string of Christmas twinkle lights inside the pumpkin and let them do the illumination.
David groups several pumpkins together outside his front door, using different sizes for variety. Simply arrange them on and about a bale of hay (available at local farms and pumpkin stands), and David promises that your front stoop will look like “a Martha Stewart catalogue.”
For people with kids, the best traditions allow children to participate without ripping into the family budget. Last year, Sarah made a sensational Halloween garland using ordinary brown paper grocery bags and twine. She simply cut out three different-sized pumpkins and glued them to the twine. Instead of pumpkin shapes, Sarah suggests bats, witches’ hats, or even cats. The cardboard from a cereal box can be used to place stencils on the grocery bags—and, of course, colored construction paper works, too. You can either glue the shapes vertically, to hang down from one end, or horizontally to drape the garland from several points. Sarah advises that these garlands work best inside or when hung in a sheltered spot.
Typically, the neighbors decorate the outdoor trees and shrubs with twinkling lights at Christmas-time. Warm those trees up in October with these Halloween craft projects. Projection designer Elaine J. McCarthy enlists her young daughter to make paper-mâché spiders from balloons inflated to the size of softballs. Add googly eyes and pipe cleaners for legs. “Then we criss-crossed white and grey yarn in the shape of spider webs through the branches of the trees in front of our house,” Elaine explains, “and dangled the spiders from the webs.” Elaine suggests protecting your spiders from the weather with a clear acrylic sealer. She used a spray-on type available at most craft stores.
Los Angeles scenic designer and artist Keith Mitchell made this “excellent outside ghost” that even frightens his dog, Puck! Using a one gallon jug, plastic garbage bags, and a couple of hangers, you, too, can haunt the neighborhood. (Complete instructions are included below.) This recyclable ghost can be hung in a tree, on your front porch, off the basketball hoop over the driveway, or used as a puppet.
Materials:
Tools:
The Head:
The Arms:
The Tattered Shreds of Ghost Flesh:
To illuminate your ghost on a dark Halloween night, David Gallo suggests using the outdoor spotlight above your garage or driveway if you have one. Purchase a colored lightbulb at the hardware store (orange, green, or purple might work best) and point it toward your ghostly creation. Don’t worry if you can’t light the front of the ghost. Your ghost will look all the more haunting and dramatic when lit from the back or side.
What better night than Halloween to shoot for the moon? Seattle-based sound designer Christopher Walker goes way overboard. With a little help from his friends, Chris stages a skeleton show in his front yard, complete with moving pirate ships, theatrical lighting, and a talking parrot. His Halloween pageants are probably more involved than you imagined for your own sleepy hollow, but boy, are they inspiring!
If this elaborate display sparks your creativity, Chris advises to start small. He recommends a project involving the vibrating motor on a cell phone and an automatic battery-powered motion detector, like a LED light, to startle your friends and neighbors. Since this project does require some wiring, kids will want to get an adult to help.
Open the motion detector unit and disconnect the LED light. Connect the vibrating motor to the motion detector unit, allowing 10-12 feet of wire so that you can locate the motor far away from the sensor. Insert the batteries and test the rig. When the connection works, attach the vibrating motor to a scary skeleton, a crab shell (Chris once used a horseshoe crab), any Halloween decoration, or even directly to a bush or small branch. Test it again! When you approach the motion detector, the object should twitch and shake! Place the motion detector where it can register traffic on a walkway and attach the vibrating end to a tree on your property or to the side of your house. When people approach, it should suddenly vibrate and scare the daylights out of them!
Copy Editor
Tiffany A. Bryant
Producer
Kenny Neal
Updated
October 16, 2019
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