KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
You don’t have to be the Addams Family to appreciate a good
thrill-a-thon. It’s time to make your home creepy, spooky, mysterious and
kooky for Halloween.
With a few resources and a little imagination, you can have the
eeriest house on the block. Halloween gives us the opportunity to push
the Outer Limits, just a little bit, and indulge in a little bit of
mystery.
The frontyard is like a blank canvas for Halloween decorations. The
bags of white nylon cobwebs are fun for everyone to use as decorations.
Last year I really got carried away and brought out the ladder and
stretched fake cobwebs from tree to tree in the frontyard. This created a
cobweb canopy about 8 feet high. I randomly threw fake spiders on top of
the fake webs, and the mood was set.
Once I started with the webs, I couldn’t stop. The kids and I wrapped
the bushes, around the front door, the windows. I even covered the rose
garden, which was a monster mess -- literally -- to clean up.
Next came the pumpkins. We don’t carve ours until the 30th so we can
avoid the mold and mildew that seems to take over in our warmer weather,
but lining up a few pumpkins by the outdoor bench brings a lot of fall
color all at once. Instant gratification.
On my scouting mission this year, I noticed that Roger’s Gardens has
ghoulish gray pumpkins, or maybe they were another type of giant gourds.
They were very weird, a Halloween plus. Gourds have some other things
going for them besides being bumpy and rather ugly -- you can save them
as Thanksgiving decorations.
Halloween calls for a little bit of the macabre, so we hang a skeleton
on the front door that laughs menacingly. I think I have scared a few
little kids on the street, which was not the intention, but the skeleton
remains, no bones about it.
The hot item in our house this year is the fake crows I bought at
Michael’s craft store. These replicas are pretty good, and they fooled my
kids for a moment when they came home and found some of the unwelcome
visitors guarding the door. The crows may be politically incorrect around
town, but they have their place as ominous door-greeters. Halloween is
definitely their holiday.
We have a string of flashing green skeletons that go along with the
front door theme. I bought mine years ago from who knows where, but I did
notice that Light Bulbs Etc. in Costa Mesa has a good selection of all
kinds of novelty lights, including skeletons, pumpkins, mummies and
glowing spider webs.
The front fountain that never got filled with water is the perfect
place for some miniature pumpkins (Trader Joe’s sells a bag of four for
$1.99). That was Karen’s Best Buy for Halloween.
We have a lot of saved kids’ artwork over the years that get special
placement. A few ghosts come out of the closet to haunt our house once a
year. And of course, it wouldn’t be Halloween if I didn’t buy the candy
early, the kids didn’t find it and eat it, and I didn’t have to go back
to the store at the last minute to buy more. Argh.
If you’re feeling daring, move the madness inside. Cover your living
room furniture with some old white sheets, tilt the pictures on the walls
and spread some fake cobwebs from corner to corner. Cobwebs also make a
great statement on your chandeliers, mantles and houseplants.
Halloween and Thanksgiving are an opportunity to have great flowers in
the house. All shades of oranges, bronzes, yellows and purples are a
beautiful combination. Pussy willows look great in fall arrangements. The
traditional varieties have grayish catkins that are visually interesting.
If you can find the pussy willow hybrid called melanostachys, get a
bunch for the perfect Halloween arrangement. The stems are greenish brown
and the catkins (the fuzzy part) are black with red anthers. A little
unearthly, but that’s the essence of the holiday.
So, skip dusting the living room this month, get a few fake webs to
add to the real ones in the corners and have some frightful fun.
KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays.
PO Photo Caption:
Though crows may be politically incorrect around town, the fake
versions make great Halloween decorations.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.