It’s time to get your goblins and ghouls out – Halloween night is fast approaching. I did a large decorating job in the San Francisco Bay area for 23 years, and the Halloween cemetery scene stole the show from all the other displays in the front yard. It’s spooky but not too scary and is a delight to all who see it, especially at night. Here’s how to create a Halloween graveyard scene of your own!
It’s the first thing you see when you enter the front gate, making it quite the spooky entrance. The lady of the house had a big Halloween party every year, and gobs of trick-or-treaters visited, so there are many, many photos taken of and in this DIY Halloween graveyard!
The Halloween graveyard props have been collected and used for years. They’ve been purchased from wholesale display houses as well as from retailers.
Each year a bit was added, and each display is slightly different. Although you may not be able to find exactly what’s been used in this display, I’ve gathered groups of similar pieces found in the collages so you can create a delightfully frightening graveyard too.
Note: This post was first published in 2016, updated on 8/21/2021, and again on 8/25/22 & 8/7/2023 with new links to help you create your own Halloween graveyard scene!
Table of Contents
Halloween Graveyard Ideas
Step By Step Instructions To Create Your Own Halloween Graveyard Decorations
- Gather all your materials close to the site. Lay similar Halloween yard decorations in groups so you can see what you’re working with. It’s been packed away for a year, after all!
- Place Halloween tombstones (mixed up randomly, as you’d see in an old cemetery, so it looks like the real thing) on the ground.
- Secure the tombstones to the ground, some upright and some at angles. I would also place 2-3 of them on the ground like they’d fallen over.
- If any figures are hanging, arrange the ghouls or skeletons (we’d use shepherd’s hooks for this) behind or amongst the gravestones.
- Arrange ghouls or skeletons to be placed on the ground.
- Fill in with skulls, hands, smaller skeletons, rats, birds, fake spider webs, etc…
- Secure what you need to with ties if you live in a windy area. We learned to do this after the 1st year!
- Border it all with a Halloween graveyard fence to complete the look.
Note: We stored similar items in boxes when the display came down. This makes it easier when installation time rolls around next year. And make sure to dry everything before packing away. If not, some of your Halloween props might mildew and be “funky” when you open them up next year.
Tools & Supplies
1- Fishing Line // 2. Wire // 3. Wire Cutters // 4. Scissors // 5. Stake // 6. Extension Cord // 7. Spotlight // 8. Hammer // 9. Steel Pegs // 10. Timer