Tuesday, October 15, 2019

Let Fear Be Your Guide

Spent a day of work feeling watched...

Phobias reach new heights during the Season of Fear which you should absolutely use to your advantage when developing your haunt.   From the familiar to the obscure, the list is long and frighteningly fruitful.   Add touches to tap into your visitors trepidation and stir unease.

Check out these examples and share you own in the comments below.

16 days till Halloween...


Arachnophobia - taunt those who fear spider with an infestation

This bad boy popped out as I was futzing with the fake webbing

Astraphobia - Fear of thunder & lightning

Catoptrophobia - Fear of mirrors.  Strategically place mirrors so visitors get startled by their own reflection

Coulrophobia - Fear of clowns.  Who exactly likes clowns?

Oh hi, you still there?

Entomophobia - Fear of insects

Hemophobia - Fear of blood

Herptophobia - Fear of reptiles

Musophobia - Fear of mice and rats

Necrophobia - Fear of death or dead things.  Taxidermy animals and their following eyes.  Shudder.  Even real animal bones can be unnerving.

Wrong on so many levels


Ophidiophobia - Fear of snakes.  You can incorporate snakes in lots of different haunt themes.  I wrap about a dozen wherever I can get them to hang.



Ornithophobia - Fear of birds

Pyrophobia - Fear of fire.  Probably why we're all so entranced by it...

So cool...until my dad nearly burnt up
the front yard

Trypophobia - Fear of holes

I know I said I wouldn't post a pic of a
lotus pod but come on, they're just too
disturbing and incredible




The Height of Horror


Creepy mobiles & dreamcatchers drift in the breeze

There's something unnerving about things hanging overhead.  Information outside of our sight line sneaks up on us or it's simply an unnatural location for some objects.  The magic of floating candles in Harry Potter, spider webs tickling our faces, a ghostly figure from a window above - our vantage point leads us to feel vulnerable to a greater power.

My love for hanging props knows no limits.  If you've been reading my blog, it comes up a lot.  A lot.  The myriad of paranormal potential will keep you crafting and hunting for new props for years to come.  Creepy mobiles and dream catchers, chandeliers, hanging baskets, macrame hanging planters, wind chimes, sun catchers, creepy curtains, lanterns, hooks, chains, Spanish Moss- I favor items that can move to increase the odds visitors will see it.  Even if they don't directly, their subconscious absorbs these details and adds to their experience.

Here's some of my favorite Little Pearl Haunt hanging props:

Bones at night, what a fright!

Driftwood, bone & sea glass sun catcher

A prefabbed light up feathered mobile
enhanced with wolf teeth & rusty wire

One of 2019 new props are these
macrame hanging plant holders I dyed with
spices, tea & coffee and added
mink skulls, white tailed deer jaws, beads & feathes

These jellyfish lamps from Mexico go from beachy to boo with the
help of an orange light bulb


Witch's Jar and Spanish Moss
Witch's Jar
Found two of these chandeliers on Craigslist for $20 total. I have since
added another that I found on the side of the road.  I love how they have a ghostly
float in mid-air, seemingly unattached to anything



16 days till Halloween....

Monday, October 14, 2019

Property Possession: Choosing a Haunt Theme



Few things captured my childhood imagination more than the Pirates of the Caribbean ride at Disneyland in Anaheim.  In particular, the beginning of the ride where the boat gently drifts through a bayou, past shacks and dripping Spanish Moss, turning you away from the stark reality of the theme park and into the underworld of piracy.  The visitor absorbs aspects they aren't even fully aware of, details so subtle they can't help but be transported in seconds before taking the plunge, literally, to the playground of rascals, scoundrels, villains and knaves.

I've taken this approach to heart as I've developed Little Pearl Haunt.  After a few years of being The Spider House, I completely changed tracks.  I adore the character Tia Dalma from the Pirates franchise, in particular her incredible shack.  Filled floor to ceiling with jars, bottles, trinkets, boxes, baskets, bones, frayed ropes, cages...the flotsam and jetsam a sorceress might gather in her journeys through the metaphysical.   I'm blessed with a nice sized sitting porch which provides ample area to replicate her shack.  Having a clear focus has also made it far easier to develop new ideas.

Choose a character to inhabit your habitat and stay faithful.  Don't let yourself be tempted by a prop simply because it's so well done or "cool" if it doesn't fit in your story line.  The greater the cohesion the more effective.  Try to stimulate all the senses as well by using incense or Halloween scented candles and playing appropriate sound effects available online.  I've included links to scents from my favorite place, Dark Candles, that I think would add value to each theme as well as sound effects suggestions you can find online (Youtube).

Lean into the style of your house - Victorian think Witch's Lair or Undertaker.  Gothic Revival or anything brick or stone for a Tomb or Dungeon.  A modern home works well for a Kill Room or Slaughter House. No need to build fake walls when you can use your own.

Use the available space to your advantage both in choosing a theme and taking into consideration your budget.  A small front porch lends nicely to a claustrophobic Tomb or Kill Room and neither require much set up.

Here are some themes that can be pulled off with just a few props while also leave room to grow over the years depending on your budget and desire.  As with all of my ideas, look for sales year round at home improvement stores, discount stores like Big Lots as well as thrift & secondhand stores.  Nearly everything I list can be acquired without breaking the bank with some leg work and patience.

Share your haunt's theme and story in the comments below!

17 days tills Halloween...

**Over the next year I'm going to do posts on each theme that will include a laundry list and photos to help set you up on a budget.  Look for my "Hundred Dollar Haunt" series and click on the links below to learn more***

Haunted House - Well, duh.  Stick with vintage and antiqued household items such as old wooden end tables, ornate frames, mirrors, old books, flocked wall paper, worn dining table chairs, velvet or similarly heavy curtains, candelabras, shredded creepy cloth, etc.  Cover everything with a Webcaster Gun for a "hasn't been touched in years" effect.
Candle: Haunted House or Apparition
Sound FX: wind, creaking boards, moans, raven calls





Swamp Shack - A variation on Haunted House and the basis for Little Pearl Haunt.  Antiqued crates, bottles, jars, cages, metal containers, charms, trinkets, bones, feathers, antlers, creepy mobiles, dreamcatchers, cauldrons, bundles of raffia attached to skulls...you never know what  the incantation will call for so best to have a little of everything on-hand.
Candle: Exorcism or Absinthe
Sound FX: Swamp sounds, frogs, crickets, water, light rain




Pirate Ship - Wine barrel planters, pre-weathered crates or age your own, hanging lanterns, rum bottles, storage chests, skulls, candles, furs & velvet, nautical instruments such as compasses, maps, a spyglass, a sextant, or hourglass and trinkets & treasures "acquired" by any means (aka costume jewelry from a thrift shop).  Researching this I found an actual wine barrel on the Habitat for Humanity Instagram for the location near me for a mere $50.  You could use this year round with a top as a backyard bar height table and then roll it out for the most wonderful time of the year.  Toss in some swords and flint stock pistols from a prop shop and, Argh!  Hoist the colors high!
Candle: Clove
Sound FX: Creaking boards of a ship as it rocks, waves, rain, thunder, wind, singing pirates



Tomb or Mausoleum - Choose an Egyptian Pharaoh or that of a Great Emperor of China and prepare a space for the journey through the afterlife.  Planters like this one or this oneplanter boxes, urns, vases, pavers in different sizes, sand, mummies, fake bones, offerings, incense and myrrh burners, statues, artwork (hieroglyphs, terra cotta warriors), stylized stools & chairs, shredded cheesecloth mummy wraps. Dried palm fronds can fill a space out with a dynamic visual.  Opt for a looted or full of treasure, recently sealed look.  This is a look that can grow.
Candle: Mage, Graveyard or Crypt Moss
Sound FX: Wind, dripping water, coffin opening




Catacomb - This one takes a bit more of an investment either in time, space, money or all 3 but oh what an impact you could have.  If you have a stone or brick house and are looking to fully embrace a haunt, this could be your match.  Check out Instructables on how to make skulls out of plastic milk jugs and build an underground bone chapel.  I'm just dying to see this flushed out sometime.
Candle: Exorcism
Sound FX: Howling wind, dripping water




Kill Room - Build a Kill Room on your front porch by hanging some clear plastic sheeting and flinging corn syrup dyed red against it for a blood spatter effect.  Wear disposable coveralls and a nitrile apron with some blue nitrile gloves.   If you're game, find a medical tray and lay out some rusty, dirty surgical tools and knives. This one is easy and universally unnerving.
Candle: Dragon's Blood
SOund FX: screaming victims, muffled voices begging for help



Dungeon - Halloween shops sell wall murals that look like stone walls if you're feeling that.  Otherwise, go with chains (real or fake), hooks (real or fake), restraints, metal basketshanging metal basketstiki torchespavers, gates (check used building materials places like the Habitat for Humanity Store for these), locks, traps, skulls and bones, etc.  Go heavy on the metal, stone and fire (real or otherwise).  Perfect for a stone or brick home, you're more than halfway done just reading this!
Candle: Cemetery Gates
Sound FX: Dripping water, moans of prisoners, creaking gates, jangling chains




Witch's Liar - A spin on Voodoo Priestess shack.  Line some brooms up next to the door to let visitors know the coven is meeting.  Create an Apothecary with glass and medicine bottles, a mortar & pestle, cauldrons & other brewing vessels.  Hang Phrenology & medical charts, insect specimen boxes.  Old books, mirrors, trinkets, bones, feathers...stock the shelves with all the necessary supplies for potion making.
Candle: Full Moon or Dark Grove
Sound FX: Bubbling potion, cackling witches, clinking jars, incantation chants







Spider Infestation - I gotta tell you, I loved doing this for all those years.  It's actually on the "easier" side once you get your supplies together and can be done inexpensively with some DIY pipe cleaner spiders.  There's loads of store bought options as well and a good mix of sizes and styles makes for an agoraphobe's nightmare.  Instead of fake webs, check out this pretty neat technique on making giant spiderwebs out of beef netting that would can be kept from year to year.
Candle: Arachne's Garden
Sound FX: Scuttling insects









Slaughter House - Okay, not going to post pictures for this one only because I find them pretty intense.  For this it's all about chains and hooks, cleavers, etc., real or Halloween prop.  What you hang is up to you - there's realistic options for all sorts of "meat" available online. 
Sound FX: Screams, saws, meat hitting the floor

Mad Scientist Laboratory - Beakers, tubes, bubbling colored fluids, smoke, scales, charts.   You can find supplies at the craft store, thrift stores and sometimes schools have sales to clear out excess & old stuff.  Thrift stores also offer up wonderful metal stuff like Turkish coffee makers, also available at kitchen supply places.
Candle: Silver Bullet
Sound FX: Bubbling chemicals, chemical explosions, maniacal laughter




Old West Undertaker - Perfect for a Victorian.  Crates, planks of wood stacked and ready to build the next coffin, a sign listing available services, death notices, rusted tools from a second hand store, wooden crosses made out of stakes antiqued with SOS Pads/Steel Wool, tombstones.  Go next level and build a coffin to advertise your goods.  Bring the scene to life by dressing as the Undertaker either with a stunning (and $$) costume from Historical Emporium or build one out of pieces you already own and a pocket watch & hat.  
Candle: Coffin
Sound FX: hammering, sawing, creaking wood





Cabin in the Woods - If you're a camper you likely will already have a lot of what you need for this.  Think classic horror movie set up - teenagers go to a cabin in the woods for a weekend only to learn they're being stalked by a killer of local legend.  Set out some sleeping bags & camping gear, bloody up some clothes from a thrift store, hang random ominous sharp & deadly objects around like hunting knives and crossbows (for when the heroine looks like she's nearly done for but yet, as she crawls backwards, her had comes upon an object...what it is?  A speargun?!?!  Hazzah!  She is saved!"  If you have one, pull out your wooden rocking chair and a place a lantern on a wooden table.  Lay out a blanket of dried leaves: a forest floor crunching under trick-or-treater's feet.  Dress the part and wear a hockey mask or trench coat.  Come up with your own story, it's YOUR woods these disrespectful kids came to party in.
Candle: Dark Grove and Falling Leaves
Sound FX: Crickets, wind, rain, howls, forest sounds



Sleepy Hallow - Credit to my darling betrothed for this idea.  My West Coast upbringing can limit me despite spending 4 years East Coast in college.  His perspective is vastly beneficial despite his complete befuddlement over my Halloween obsession.  So I bring to you, Sleepy Hallow/Ichabod Crane Haunt.  If you are blessed enough to have a tree lined lane, sidewalk or drive (Sacramento I'm looking at you) - please do this!!  This one is perfect for the audiophile in that you can plant speakers along your visitor's path to develop and tell this story.  Start with the wisp of a swirling wind followed by a hooting call of an owl.  As they draw near, add the distant sound of thundering horse hooves, drawing near.  Lanterns light the way to safety (?!?) as crows alert their dire warnings overhead.  Create your own forrest by attaching branches to porch columns and posts and lay a bed or dried leaves you've been hoarding as the weather changes.  A lone scarecrow with pumpkin head is just enough to elicit distant memories of this classic legend.  Google the legend for more inspiration - it's Civil War timeframe elicits an abundance of opportunities.
Sound FX: wind, galloping lone horse, crows, crickets, night forrest sounds


Burbank people, but at night...plant speakers in the city
trees to start the audio story on the path to your haunt

Bat Cave - Perfect for a stone home, especially one with a smaller front porch, entrance.  As easy as sticking some Command toggle hooks to the ceiling and hanging bats.  If you want more of a cave look, again using Command hooks, create a rounded false ceiling by hanging grey creepy cloth or a grey tarp or drop cloth.  Use strips of burlap to create hanging stalagmites or vines.
Candle: Crypt Moss
Sound FX: Dripping water, flapping bat wings, high pitched bat shrieks



Funhouse - Turn your pillared front porch entrance into the gaping mouth of a creepy clown.  Line the walls in alternating sheets of red & white plastic tablecloth to create a tent.  Funhouse mirror, signs advertising the "freak" show.  Dress as a carnival barker.  Or clown if you want no one anywhere near you.
Candle: Dark Carnival
Sound FX: Carnival music played at unusual speeds, Hurdy-Gurdy, sinister laughter, children's screams, bells & whistles of the midway games






Home Improvement Haunt

Context is everything.  In the right environment a common item can take on a whole new spooky life with or without minimal adju...