Halloween is right around the corner, so I want to share some fun outdoor Halloween decoration ideas with you. I used to do a decorating job in the San Francisco Bay Area for 15 years, celebrating this wacky holiday. I no longer work on this project now that I live in Tucson, but it sure is fun to look back at all these delightfully scary Halloween yard decorations.
The lady of the house was crazy for Halloween, which is putting it mildly! The front yard outdoor decorations for Halloween slowly expanded over time and had dedicated storage space in her garage and attic.
Ghosts, zombies, skeletons, black cats, purple trees with limbs that move, fog machines, grim reapers, rats, spiders, lots of real or faux pumpkins and gourds, mums, butlers, maids, and skeletons that scream out frightening cries in the night – you name it – it’s all here in all the best ways.
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The front porch and yard outdoor decorations you see here have been collected and re-used for years. They come from wholesale display houses, retail catalogs, the San Francisco Flower Market, the Los Angeles Mart, and even K-Mart, Sears, and Orchard Supply Hardware. Each year the displays are slightly different, so the current year outshines the last year.
This whole yard display is reuse at its finest. Some of these Halloween yard decorations were expensive, but many were not. You don’t need to break the bank to have a welcoming and delightful front yard display.
Many years ago, some of the decor took flight over the Pacific Ocean when a fierce storm rolled in the day before Halloween. Those Halloween props that remained look all the more authentic, tattered, and dirt-stained. How’s ever heard of a clean ghoul?!
Here are some scary outdoor Halloween decorations that inspire you for your yard, porch, and front door. These are the best and most unique Halloween decorations I’ve ever worked with, and they’re perfect to put on display all month long and a great way to greet trick-or-treaters and Halloween party guests.
For my fellow Halloween fans, find your witches’ hat and broom and get ready to take off to a haunted house and garden!
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Halloween Yard Decorations Ideas
Halloween Front Porch Decorations
The entire neighborhood loved this decorated front porch. There’s so much to see and hear as many figures move and talk. A mixture of fall garlands adorn the porch railings, and pumpkins and squashes line each step staying up right through to Thanksgiving.
Wondering how to reuse Halloween decor for a new look every year? This post on How To Reuse Halloween Front Porch Decor will help you.
TIP: The ghoulish figures and zombie decorations spanning the length of the front porch are tied together to the porch posts (but with some slack) using fishing line. They move and flutter in the wind but stay facing the street and walkway. Otherwise, they spin around like crazy, and the effect isn’t the same when you’re looking at their backs.
TIP: This house got a new paint job at one point. We protected the railing going up and around the front porch from wire marks by first covering it with saran wrap and then with soft rubber open-cell material (used for drawer and shelf lining) on top of that. This was the best way to help the heavily decorated garland grip on and stay in place.
“WHEN BLACK CATS PROWL AND PUMPKINS GLEAM, MAY LUCK BE YOURS ON HALLOWEEN.” – UNKNOWN
Halloween Graveyard Decorations
Halloween decorated yards are so much fun, and this cemetery scene steals the show every year. Many photos are taken of it on Halloween night, soon after people enter through the gate.
Because the lawn is artificial, all the decor is attached with fishing line and wire to posts and screws on painted plywood platforms. The headstones are made of various materials, including styrofoam, fiberglass, resin, and plastic. Even the foam tombstones have held up fairly well over time, and all it takes is a little paint to touch up any missing chunks.
Some of the figures didn’t weather that storm too well. They’re a bit battered and look much better on the ground next to the gravestones. I always added some faded hydrangea flowers from the garden for that “Morticia Addams” touch.
A Halloween cemetery is a fitting addition to any front yard. Get lots more info & ideas on How To Create A Spooky Graveyard.
TIP: Position some of your tombstones at an angle – it makes the graveyard look older and gives a spooky look effect.
TIP: Tatter and slit the ghosts and ghouls more than they already are. That way, they’ll flutter in the wind and look all the more eery!