Happy Spooky Season folks!!
If you are anything like me you LOVE this time of year for a couple reasons. 1. Candy. And as if that's not reason enough, what about the FUN!!! I LOVE, LOVE, LOVE crafting for Halloween! This last couple weeks I made a few things and thought I'd share with all my crafty friends how I made them, what I used, some trials and tribulations along the way and of course, the super cool finished products!
A lot of times, if I have a couple hours before bed when I SHOULD be relaxing and even hitting the sack a little early, I get the crafting bug and just have to do something crafty! I can hang out with my family, watch a movie, carry on a serious conversation or even help the kiddos with homework while I'm crafting. I sometimes have crafters remorse if I waste a couple hours 'relaxing' and wish that I'd spent that time doing a craft. I'm a little crafty crazy, I guess!
A couple months ago a friend picked up some of the witch hat forms for me at Dollar Tree. I just had to try something with these forms! I had seen so many amazing creations and I'd never worked with this type of form before. Since Halloween was approaching I decided what better time to start my Halloween creations, right?
I grabbed my Dollar Tree purple, orange, and black mesh and took a deep breath as I sat down to figure out how to make this witch hat come to life! I had no clue how to work with mesh but I had watched people do it so I was sure it wouldn't be too difficult. The only thing I learned is that I need to buy a better, quality mesh for future projects. It was ok, but it frayed A LOT! I had to keep tucking and snipping the whole time. Maybe it was user error, but there has to be a better way. The mesh wasn't even the tough part. I needed to cover the top of the witch hat with something and all I could find was an old black, cloth table cover. It was basically a prop in my Halloween decorations anyway so I cut it into strips and wound them around the top of the hat. I covered a little wooden pumpkin with a piece of a scarf from DT and added that and a cute bow. I found a 'Spooky' metal sign in my stash and glued that on as well. I also used cardboard to shape the tip of the hat before I wrapped it so it would sort of hang down at the end. I used a string to hang a little spider, you know, for spooky effects! And lastly, I had picked up some witch legs from DT. They're a bit saggy so I may fill them and reattach! All in all, didn't take too long and turned out pretty cute!

After the witch hat I was scrolling Pinterest one day and was inspired to do a skull candy dish. It looked easy enough so I went to the Dollar Tree to get a couple things. I made this one in about 2 hours as well but I didn't do it live so I don't have a lot to show you on the actual construction. I started by cutting slits in the heads of the skulls and sliding them over a plunger handle. I hot glued them to each other and to the handle for stability. I painted a plastic silver platter with black chalk paint and glued the tower of heads to the center of the platter. It didn't feel very stable so I put a few screws through the bottom of the platter, into the plunger handle and the bottom skull. I glued on a bunch of purple and black flowers to the platter, some spiders, and 2 eyeball ornaments. Then I took a screw and attached the dish to the head of the top skull. Unfortunately, it was a little lopsided. So I found a glitter covered black foam ball and wedged it between the bottom of the dish and the skull to level it out. The dish looks kind of small, but this was meant for trick or treating or even a few treats at home so I didn't need a big dish. We only get about 10-15 little ghouls and goblins each year. The spiders, eyeballs and branch embellishments were all part of the flower sprigs so that was convenient! Fun, fairly quick and super inexpensive candy dish. Wala!


The next project I dove into was the Spooky candle tower! I had seen this one made a few different ways and watch part of a live video where Scott, from Waterman's Loft made one. It turned out so cool!! I just had to try it! I decided to do a little spooky make up and hair for my live, you know, to make it fun!! (I'm such a dork!)
This super cool candle tower called for pool noodles, which are difficult to find this time of year. But Dollar Tree often carries them in Halloween colors, for the crafters, I'm sure! I went to so many Dollar Trees!! I went to some other stores as well but just couldn't find them. I could've ordered them online from Dollar Tree but when I got the bug to make this, there was just no time to wait for shipping!! So off to Lowe's I went! I picked up some plumbing insulation tubes and crossed all my fingers and toes!!
I bought 4 of these tubes because I wanted to have at least 10 pieces once I cut it up. The tubes had plastic strips covering the glue where you adhere it when you wrap it around your plumbing. I removed that plastic and stuck them together but it wasn't very sticky! I had to hot glue them a little to be sure they stayed together. I used my favorite kitchen knife to cut them because it was easier than scissors. No one was injured in the making of this project...promise. lol


I dripped hot glue from the top lip of each piece to make it look like melting candle wax. The first one turned out great but by the time I got to the second one the glue heated up and it was sort of melting right through the tube! I was worried because I didn't have enough glue sticks for my low temp glue gun to finish this project. And since it was live, I had to improvise! I continued with my fingers crossed!! After I did the melting wax tops I covered them in a coat of black, indoor/outdoor paint that I bought at Lowes. I wasn't sure how much paint I would need, or how many coats, so I bought that instead of using my acrylic paint because ultimately I feel like it was cheaper. I used my heat gun to dry the paint faster and save time since I was doing it live and trying to avoid another 4 hour project! You can see in the pictures that I let them get a little too hot in some areas because it altered the shape of the tube. This created an issue later so stay tuned!




Funny, not-so-funny story though. When we returned from Lowe's the other day, my son opened the truck door and the paint can fell out, onto our driveway. The can lid popped off and we are now the proud owners of a big dry puddle of driveway paint. We have a pressure washer and will try to remove the paint that way. But once again, fingers crossed!!! lol I managed to save enough paint to do this project so it wasn't a complete loss.
I debated painting at all but the wax drippings looked much better once they were covered. Here you can see the very subtle difference in a painted tube and an unpainted tube.
After the tubes were all dry I needed to assemble them to create my tiered candle tower. Remember when I said I watched Scott make this? Well, I started after he had these assembled so I was truly winging it in the live! I didn't use a base but instead tried to hot glue them together. I grabbed some twine to hold them in place but apparently I have super butter fingers!


I ended up laying them on the table to tie them together because me and the twine weren't seeing eye-to-eye. Ultimately, I got rid of the twine and tied a couple pieces of ribbon to the bottom, for more stability. I also took some of the left over stems from the flowers and stuck them in to secure the tubes a little more. I don't know how to explain that any other way. The tubes were slightly warped from the heat gun so they weren't adhering well to each other. It wasn't enough that the glue was eating through them, I just had to get the heat gun too close! Ugh! But the flower stem pieces worked pretty good to hold them together. I probably used a dozen! That was the most frustrating part!!!
The skull was from DT as well. The color bothered me. I wanted it to be white so the colors of the whole candle tower kind of matched. So I painted it white! And then I brushed some silver on it for sparkle. And because I wanted it to tie into the silver sparkly skulls and leafy embellishments I was planning to use! I glued it to the bottom right side of the tower and thankfully, it stuck pretty good!!
I snipped some black and red flowers and placed them in a cascading fashion around the tower. I left part of the stem instead of just gluing the flower heads on because I thought sticking the stem through the tubes would help them stay in place better. I added some spiders, also leaving the little piece of plastic that sticks up from their little bellies, again, to stick them through the tube and hold them in place better. I had some rubber bats from DT and put one of those around the top, arranging it so it looked kind of like it was flying up the tower. I had 2 skeleton hands that I was determined to use and they fit in perfectly!
This was another super fun project where, once again, I learned some things!! Don't use heat guns on foam at close range. Use a low heat glue gun when working with foam. Use a base or ANY OTHER METHOD to get your tubes/candles to stay together and STRAIGHT. Sambo's way is not the best way, folks.
After the live I put the candles in and snapped a few photos in the dark as well as the natural light. Not too bad, Sambo. Not too bad.
This last one is not as exciting but a couple nights ago I was rearranging some craft stuff and came across some Halloween napkins.
It was a week night. Dinner, dishes, homework, and baths were done so I decided to spend an hour and a half creating something creepy with these napkins! I had a square picture from DT that I bought a while back so I chose that for my 'canvas'. It was like particleboard with a picture on one side. I was going to sand it off because it had a bunch of glitter. Then I started to paint it white. But then it started to peel so I got another idea! I peeled most of the picture off, leaving a little behind. Then I covered the whole thing with mod podge and adhered the spider napkin. I used a sanding block to sand off the excess napkin. The excess that I left behind helped create some wrinkles in the napkin that made it look super creepy!


I cut the skull out of the other napkin and mod podged him to the corner, leaving room to write a spooky message! After doing the word 'Beware' it was a little off center so I added a spider web in the top, left corner. Once I finished all the wording I put another layer of mod podge over the entire thing to coat it and protect it. Then, using the holes that were there already, I added a black and white string so I could hang it on my wall. Another super cute, super fun, super quick and inexpensive craft!
These are the fun Halloween crafts I've made in the last couple weeks. And we still have a couple weeks to go! Make sure you're subscribed to this blog and following my
Sambo's Crafts Facebook Group so you don't miss updates on future crafts and adventures!!
Thank you for stopping by today and reading about all the fun projects I've been working on for Halloween! Christmas is right around the corner and it's gonna be AMAZING!!! Can't wait to craft with you again!!
Happy Crafting!!