Halloween, the holiday built around the twin pleasures of playing dress-up and eating too much candy, is obviously a hit with children. Halloween, the holiday built around the twin pleasures of playing dress-up and eating too much candy, is obviously
Halloween, the holiday built around the twin pleasures of playing dress-up and eating too much candy, is obviously a hit with children.
But send invitations to your grown-up friends and you’ll probably find they haven’t outgrown the urge to don creepy costumes and celebrate in spooky, theatrical style.
Want to host a party that merges Halloween fun with grown-up sophistication? Turning your home into a haunted mansion is surprisingly easy, said interior designer Brian Patrick Flynn, founder of Flynnside Out Productions.
Just ditch the cheerful orange pumpkins and smiling ghosts for darker, more creative decor.
“Stay away from anything cute,” Flynn said, “and instead opt for creepy-chic.”
Here Flynn and two other design experts — Jon Call of Mr. Call Designs and the latest “HGTV Star” winner, Tiffany Brooks — offer decorating advice for a memorable, stylish and affordable Halloween party.
Natural fabrics
Cheesecloth evokes ancient mummies, while burlap brings to mind scarecrows. Both fabrics are inexpensive and lightweight, but sturdy — perfect for Halloween party tablecloths.
These solid-color pieces also have a more adult feel than the whimsical prints on Halloween tablecloths or napkins designed for kids.
Call likes using large sheets of brown craft paper on buffet tables or as a runner down the center of a Halloween dining table. Cluster small gourds (the darker and more oddly shaped, the better) along the runner, he said, then add a few large pillar candles.
Easily and inexpensively, “you’ve knocked out a table that’s great for any fall holiday,” Call said. And cleanup is simple: “After a party, throw the paper out.”
Flynn said you can make your home’s entryway extra creepy by soaking large pieces of cheesecloth in tea, then shredding the cloth once it’s dry. Hang the pieces from the ceiling above your porch or drape it from walls with a few well-placed nails to conjure up the feel of a haunted house.
Dark and dangerous colors
All three designers suggest using a muted palette of grays, browns and black. Brooks suggested spray-painting pumpkins glossy gray to create a glamorous centerpiece.
Use orange only as an accent, Flynn said, perhaps adding a few orange napkins to an otherwise black and gray table setting.
You can also create a dramatic scene by spray-painting empty wine bottles in a matte black, he said, then replacing the labels with your own creations: Using scrapbooking labels or cardstock and a Sharpie, come up with creepy names for the liquids supposedly in the bottles.
Flynn also suggested buying inexpensive wooden birdhouses or cheap Christmas village houses, then spraying them with dark gray or black paint to create a mini-ghost town for display on your buffet table or bar.
Weird walls
Take down any cheerful artwork and replace it with old portraits from thrift shops or flea markets. Halloween stores sell deliberately creepy portraits made for this purpose, but it’s more fun to hunt down real paintings, said Flynn.
Brooks agreed this easy decorating move can transform the feel of a room, especially if the room will be lit only by candles. (She plans to shut off her electricity entirely during a Halloween party this year, filling each room with just enough black pillar candles to provide dim, flickering light.)
Once you’ve hung your new gallery of portraits, Flynn suggested taping tiny pieces of black construction paper over the eyeballs in the pictures for a haunted mansion feel.
Serious things
Flynn also recommended trolling thrift shops and flea markets for items that evoke dusty, dated Victorian style, or midcentury pieces that seem lifted from a ’60s Hitchcock movie.
Fill old apothecary jars and other glass containers with water tinted with yellow and green food coloring to suggest formaldehyde. Then drop anything — tiny plastic animals, seed pods, bits of moss — into the colorful liquid. Or create terrariums by filling glass vases with twigs, moss, and tiny plastic bugs and snakes.
Seek out second-hand treasures: real or fake taxidermy, stone bust bookends, antique dolls and toys, and vintage books and laboratory or surgical equipment.
If you’re lucky, you might even come across some old mannequin heads. What was once a wig display can serve as an eye-popping Halloween centerpiece.
Other inexpensive additions to your party space: Fill vases with bare branches spray-painted black, tying a few small bats from a craft store to the limbs.
Flynn also suggested slipping belts around the backs of chairs to suggest that dinner guests may not escape the table easily.
And Brooks recommended using a hodgepodge of mismatched and even scratched dishes from thrift shops (cleaned well, of course) to give your table an off-kilter, haunted house feel.
A finishing touch to inspire Halloween guests: “One of my neighbors here is an actor,” said Brooks, who lives in Antioch, Ill. “So she’s going to come in as a guest and get the conversation going in a creepy direction.”
Chances are you know at least one person who would take on the role of spooky storyteller or mystery visitor, adding a layer of theater to the party.
For more information, visit these websites: mrcalldesigns.com, flynnsideout.com and hgtv.com.