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Tuesday 31 October 2017

How to Celebrate Halloween

Halloween comes on the 31st of October every year. If you want to celebrate, you have multiple options. You can throw a party with friends and family, decorate for the season, or participate in events around your town. Have fun and enjoy the festivities with friends and family members. With some preparation and planning, you and your loved ones can enjoy a fun and festive Halloween.

EditSteps

EditHaving a Party

  1. Have everyone wear a costume. Part of the fun of Halloween is dressing up. If you're hosting a party, invite all your guests to wear costumes. If you want, you can even have a contest where guests win different categories like "Scariest Costume," "Funniest Costume," and so on.[1]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 1 Version 2.jpg
    • You can have a specific theme and have guests dress for that theme. For example, try a sci-fi Halloween party.
    • Remember, not everyone likes dressing up. If guests don't want to wear a costume, don't push it.
  2. Bob for apples. Bobbing for apples is a classic Halloween tradition that many people love. Simply place some apples in a bucket of water and have guests try to lift them out with their mouths. This can be fun if you want a more lighthearted holiday party instead of something scary.[2]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 2 Version 2.jpg
  3. Watch scary movies. If you want, you can have a movie screening at your party. Show your favorite scary movies that are perfect for the season, like The Exorcist, The Sixth Sense, and films from the Halloween franchise.[3]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 3 Version 2.jpg
    • If you're serving alcohol at your party, have a drinking game where guests have to drink for a variety of reasons. For example, "Drink every time someone screams." Make sure to drink responsibly, however, and stop drinking if you start to feel dizzy or disoriented.
  4. Play spooky music. Make a spooky playlist with disturbing songs like "Somebody's Watching Me" and the theme music from Halloween classics. Something like the theme to Rosemary's Baby can really set the mood.[4]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 4 Version 2.jpg
    • Keep in mind, not everything about a Halloween party has to be scary. You can also play lighthearted Halloween favorites, like the theme to Ghostbusters or "The Monster Mash."
  5. Serve Halloween-themed punch. Make a spooky punch by mixing together dark juices, like fizzy red pop or blackberry juice, to create a punch that looks something like blood. You can also add "eyeballs" by stuffing blackberries into lychee berries and placing them in the punch so they bob on the surface.[5]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 5 Version 2.jpg
    • If you're serving alcohol at your party, consider spiking the punch with a liquor like vodka or rum. Just make sure guests drink responsibly.
  6. Provide Halloween treats. There are a wide variety of treats you can provide for the event. You can provide classic candy that's often handed out to trick or treaters, like small candy bars. You can also try making your own Halloween-themed baked goods. For example, make cutout cookies in shapes like pumpkins or cats and frost them with orange and black frosting.[6]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 6 Version 2.jpg
    • Be sure to provide healthy snacks, like fruits and veggies, for more health conscious guests.
  7. Welcome in the trick-or-treaters throughout the night. If you live in a residential area, you may get some trick-or-treaters throughout the night. Have a bowl of candy on hand and give a few pieces of candy to anyone that comes to your door.[7]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 7 Version 2.jpg
    • If you have any pets, it's a good idea to lock them up before trick-or-treaters arrive.

EditDecorating for Halloween

  1. Carve pumpkins. You can buy pumpkins at the supermarket around Halloween. Cut open the top, remove the seeds and pulp from the insides, and cut out fun shapes or faces onto the sides of the pumpkins. Place a candle on the bottom of the pumpkin and light it to create an eerie, glowing pumpkin.[8]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 8 Version 2.jpg
    • If you're carving pumpkins with young children, do not let them handle knives. Instead, have them draw faces on the pumpkins and then cut them out yourselves.
  2. Hang up fake spiderwebs. You can buy fake spiderwebs at most department stores around the Halloween season. Place the webs in areas like staircases and the corners of ceilings to give your home a spooky look.[9]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 9 Version 2.jpg
    • You can also add a few rubber spiders to the webs for an extra scary look.
  3. Make a ghost candy stand. Take a large glass or plastic bowl and place it on an end table. Drape a white sheet over the bowl and then fill the bowl with candy. The sheet should fall down around the bowl and over the table. Cut out pieces of felt, or a similar material, into the shape of eyes and a mouth and pin them somewhere on the sheet so it looks like a ghost.[10]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 10 Version 2.jpg
  4. Make a mummy door. A simple way to decorate is to make a mummy door. Simply string toilet paper or white crepe paper along your door. Then, make two eyes out of construction paper and tape them on the door so it looks like a mummy.[11]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 11.jpg
  5. Decorate with balloon ghosts. Blow up a balloon and then place it in a white garbage bag. Twist the bag around the end of the balloon and secure it on with a rubber band. Use a marker to draw eyes and a mouth on the balloon for a spooky Halloween decoration.[12]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 12.jpg

EditParticipating in Halloween Events

  1. Go trick or treating. If you have small children, or are still young enough yourself, trick-or-treating can be fun. Go from house to house with a bucket or bag and ask for collect candy from neighbors. This is a fun way to show off costumes and indulge in some Halloween treats.[13]
    Celebrate Halloween Step 13.jpg
    • Practice basic safety precautions, however. Stick to residential areas where most people are still awake and inspect all your candy before eating it.
    • Remember, not everyone is open to trick-or-treaters. Make sure you don't go to houses if the lights are off. A lack of decorations may also indicate someone does not want to participate.
  2. Visit a haunted house. See if there are any haunted houses in your areas. As Halloween is meant to be a scary holiday, get a group of friends together to go to a haunted house. This can be a fun way to get a little scared and still mark the event.
    Celebrate Halloween Step 14.jpg
    • However, keep in mind not everyone likes haunted houses. Don't force anyone to go if they're not interested. Some people may genuinely get scared.
  3. Look for screenings at local movie theaters. Movie theaters may do events for Halloween. They may screen Halloween classics or offer free or discounted tickets. Do an online search to see if there are any special events at local theaters for Halloween.
    Celebrate Halloween Step 15.jpg
  4. Take a ghost tour. Look online to see if your area offers ghost tours. A guided tour through your hometown's most haunted sites can be a great way to make the most of Halloween.
    Celebrate Halloween Step 16.jpg
    • Ghost tours may fill up fast during the holiday season, so get your tickets well ahead of time.

EditTips

  • Always inspect your children's candy collection when they return from trick-or-treating; some people give out strange things.

EditRelated wikiHows

EditSources and Citations


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