Making your own crafts for Halloween means making a whole lot of fun, and each finished craft project is a unique one that only you could have made. House decorations are terrific ways to accommodate guests, whether at a party or tick or treaters. They are usually super-easy to make and quite inexpensive. We have some tips below and hopefully they will help you to realize a few crafts of your own.
- Design a pumpkin or ghost-like face on empty one-gallon milk jugs then paint on the face. After you’ve cut out a back hole, light the jugs with candles or bulbs. Those battery operated candles are the best, and safest.
- Get a few of those twig wreaths from the craft store and seasonal decorative items and flowers for them. You can make a Fall one first for Halloween, then one for Winter, Spring and Summer.
- Spiders! These can be made from all sorts of found and purchased objects. One of the easiest is to get 8 of those chenille stems, a couple of googly eyes, a small styrofoam ball, and a suction cup. Paint the ball with appropriate paint, stick the stems in like legs, glue on the eyes and suction cup, and stick it on your windows.
- Make a crowd of ghosts for the front lawn — Set up a few tomato cages and use twigs for arms. Weave a strand of lights through the cage and test to see if they light up. Cover with sheet or muslin and always use tiny lights for safety.
- Eyes on the passersby. Use ping pong balls and tea lights which are battery powered. Paint the ping pong ball to look like an eyeball then cut a small hole in the bottom and stick it on to the tea light. Line up in your front window on a ledge.
- Purchase one or more of those white translucent paper globe lights. Decorate with scrapbooking or construction paper and then plug it in. This is one lit owl!
- Paint acorns orange then draw faces on them with a permanent marker. Arrange the tiny “pumpkins” how you like. This is a good one for kids as the pumpkins like tiny hands to make them!
- Pumpkins can be changed into baseball players. Put a real hat on them, paint some eyes and part of a face, then blow up a small pink balloon, tie it off, then make a small hole and poke it into the pumpkin where the mouth would be.
- Your own batmobile, or other mobile. Start with a wire hanger then cut out bat shapes and hang them from the hangar with twine or fishing line. Make a hangar go through another at right angles and you’ll have more hanging points. Use pumpkins instead, or ghosts.
- Paint small pumpkins black, put on fierce eyes, cut out wings from craft foam, and you’ll have some unique bat-pumpkins. If you paint the eyes differently they will have different expressions.
- An assortment of creepy creatures. Use craft foam and cut out bats and spiders and black cats. You can out these on a mirror or the inside of your windows.
- Bats that are fuzzy. Cut a little puff off of a feather boa, attach craft foam wings and eyes, and you’ll have a whole bunch of bat kitties.
- Cut a band of paper and measure it to fit around a votive candle holder. Cut eyes out of the paper in pairs and when a candle is lit, the eyes will dance.
- If you are camping around Halloween, then make yourself a nice sign out of cardboard like : The Smith’s Campsite. Decorate with leaves and hang on the nearest to the campsite post.
- Permanent pumpkins can be made by using clay pots, upside down, and decorate with yellow Jack O’Lantern faces and a piece of foam or branch for the stem.
- If you have a pair of windows in your house, then decorate each half from the inside to look like a Jack O’Lantern from the outside.
- Make a big spider for your window by using a half of a large styrofoam egg, then sticking bendable foam legs into the side. Don’t forget there are 8!
- Use battery powered tea lights in small brown paper bags and line your walkway with them.