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Arts & CraftsHow to Make Halloween Decorations

How to Make a Haunted House

Instructions

  • : Pregnant women, people with heart conditions, and those who are photosensitive to flashing lights, like some epileptics, should not visit haunted houses.
  • Step 1: Build on a theme Base your design on a theme. Classics like “insane asylum” or “serial killer-plagued campground” will give you lots of material to play with.
  • TIP: The more thorough and specific your details, the scarier your haunted house will be.
  • Step 2: Pick a scary location Consider holding your event at or near a scary location, like an old graveyard.
  • TIP: Make sure it’s a safe — and legal — location. Things will be less scary if the cops shut you down halfway through the night.
  • Step 3: Work in live-action stunts Liven up your haunted house with live-action stunts. Enlist a few costumed friends, and have them grab onto guests, create eerie effects, and make stationary tableaus come to life.
  • Step 4: Incorporate different textures Incorporate different unidentifiable textures. Create sudden mists using spray bottles and force guests to walk through black thread or clingy cotton webbing, which is available at craft or convenience stores around Halloween.
  • Step 5: Tailor your sound effects Instead of the same old cackling witches and clanking chains, tailor sound effects to your theme. Give each room a different soundtrack, and work in a few unexpected noise triggers.
  • TIP: Use silence to your advantage. A lack of sound can help to build suspense.
  • Step 6: Create a mist Use a fog machine, which you can rent or buy at a stage or lighting store, to create a ghoulish creeping mist.
  • Step 7: Set up strobe lights Use strobe lights to disorient your guests. Set the lights to make the action seem to take place in an eerie slow motion.
  • Step 8: Use blindfolds Consider blindfolding your guests and having them feel their way through parts of the house. Alternately, keep things dark, and make your guests find their way with flashlights.
  • Step 9: Provide one way out Let guests know at the start that there’s only one way out — the exit at the end of the tour. This single-exit strategy will help to ratchet up the excitement and tension, and keep your guests eagerly pushing forward through your house of horrors.
  • FACT: In 2005, a four-story haunted house named Erebus in Pontiac, Michigan, was certified by the Guinness Book of World Records as the world’s largest walk-through haunted attraction.

You Will Need

  • A theme
  • materials
  • and sound effects
  • Volunteers
  • A scary location (optional)
  • Blindfolds or flashlights (optional)

Lessons in this Guide

How to Build a Coffin

How to Create Halloween Face Painting Designs

Quick Tips: How to Scoop Out a Pumpkin Easily

Quick Tips: How to Keep a Carved Pumpkin Fresh

How to Carve a Cylon Pumpkin

How to Make a Smoking Punch Bowl with Dry Ice

How to Make a Spooky Halloween Yard Sign

How to Make Halloween Tombstones

How to Craft a Duct Tape Halloween Bag

How to Make a Scarecrow

How to Make a Haunted House

How to Make Fake Intestines

How to Carve a Pumpkin

How to Make Fake Vomit

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