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26 Fun Halloween Decorating Ideas

Set the mood for a stylishly spooky holiday with pumpkin carving ideas and more decor the neighborhood will love.

Sunset Staff

Move over, triangle-eyed jack-o’-lanterns. Below are 26 next-level ideas for Halloween decorations that don’t even all include pumpkins.

If you do want to keep that traditional gourd on your porch, why not do something a little different this fall. Instead of carving it, you could paint it, decorate it with paper, or try this scraping technique that makes a pattern that catches the eye during the day and looks frightastic at night.

Whether you choose to paint, carve, stencil, suspend, stack, or Frankenstein your pumpkin—or go a different direction entirely—we’ve got the spooky-season décor style for you.

1 /26 Josè Mandojana

Stylish Pumpkin Stencil

Artist Nikki McClure shares instructions for creating this unique jack-o’-lantern for Halloween.

Get the free stencil and how-to.

2 /26 Jeffery Cross; styling by Ana Monfort

Spooky Diorama

Cut the stem and a few inches of the rind around it out of the top of the pumpkin, then scoop out the seeds. Cut a rectangle out of the face of the pumpkin. Position rubber animals and miniature trees—available at craft stores—in the “window,” poking the tree trunks into the flesh if needed. Place an LED candle inside.

3 /26 E. Spencer Toy

Animal Mask Pumpkins

If carving pumpkins feels too labor-intensive, try this easy and adorable no-carve idea instead. Your little ones can help cut out and assemble these Halloween “costumes” for your gourds, which makes it a truly family-friendly DIY.

More: How to Make Animal-Masked Pumpkins

4 /26 Rita Maas / Getty Images

Mod and Easy

When time is short, forget pumpkin carving altogether and go for paint; acrylic paints from the crafts store work best. Use a damp cloth to wipe the pumpkin clean, then air dry it or dry with a paper towel. Outline the design using a stencil. Paint it in stages (top and sides first, then—when it’s dry—the bottom, so the pumpkin won’t stick to a paper-covered surface).

5 /26 E. Spencer Toy

Blue Painted Pumpkins

Another no-carve pumpkin idea gives your Halloween decor a trendy spin. Using a bold blue base and stylish stencils, painted patterns allow you to get creative without too much mess.

More: How to Paint Pumpkins

6 /26 Thomas J. Story

Ghostly Group

With all the pumpkins available, why settle for the same ’ol, same ’ol? This year, pick up a white pumpkin, and carve a spooky specter. Better yet, buy a bunch and create a pack of them. A few tips:

  • For perfectly round or oblong eyes, print large O’s from your computer to use as a guide. Play around with various sizes and fonts—italicized ones work especially well.
  • Cut out the O’s, tape them to your pumpkin, then use a large needle or pushpin to transfer your design to the pumpkin.
7 /26 Thomas J. Story

Sneaky Jack-o’-Lantern Carving

Show off a traditional Halloween message in a highly unusual way. Jackie Ortega, owner of San Francisco’s Craft Gym, says this project is easy to pull off once you know the secret.

More: Get this sneaky jack-o’-lantern secret

8 /26 Thomas J. Story

Floating Pumpkins

Foam pumpkins are thin enough to carve with a craft knife and light enough to hang with thin wire.

How to: Make floating pumpkins

9 /26 James Baigrie / Getty Images

Batman and Friend

Add a bit of mystery to your carved pumpkins by fitting them with ready-made black masks. (Or make a mask from black construction paper or black felt from a crafts store).

10 /26 Rob D. Brodman

Pumpkin House Numbers

Pumpkin house numbers are a surprising twist on the traditional jack-o’-lantern.

More: How to carve pumpkin house numbers

11 /26 Thomas J. Story

Black Cat o’Lanterns

Create a spooky trio of glossy black cats to watch over trick-or-treaters at your door. All you need are a few pumpkins in feline shapes―long or pear-shaped for the body, small and round for the face.

More: How to make black cat o’lanterns

12 /26

Halloween Globes

Invert a glass globe that normally goes over an electric ceiling light fixture, tuck a tea light inside, and you’ve got a glowing Halloween lantern.

Choose a globe that fits over the porch light and you can greet trick-or-treaters in an orange glow.

Get the how-to: Make globe lanterns

13 /26 Jamie Grill/Getty Images

Glitter and Glam

A shapely white pumpkin doesn’t need much help to sparkle on a clean white table or porch. Just buy tiny metallic stars and rubbery spiders at the crafts store, then sprinkle them around. Use dabs of white glue to hold some of them in place where needed).

14 /26 Rob D. Brodman

Pumpkin Bouquet

Welcome trick-or-treaters with a cheerful grouping of harvest-season pumpkin flowers. These daisies, roses, sunflowers, and chrysanthemums are just as easy to carve as a ghoulish face. The tricky part: instead of cutting all the way through the core, peel away the tough outer layer and allow the pith underneath to remain. The contrasting shapes of orange will stand out during the day and glow at night.

15 /26 Kate Kunath / Getty Images

Dancing Skelly

Three pumpkins, joined together totem style, form this Halloween character that appears to kick up his heels on a front lawn. Use rebar stakes to secure the pumpkins to each other, and to the ground.

16 /26 Thomas J. Story

Beautiful, Leafy Pumpkins

Encircle a few Halloween pumpkins with slender carvings to add a subtle glow to your front porch.

17 /26 Photo by Thomas J. Story; design by Birte Walter

Glowing Vines

A Sunset favorite: meandering patterns add a whimsical storybook appeal to your arrangement.

18 /26 Photo by Thomas J. Story; design by Birte Walter

Harlequin Leaves

Repeat a single leaf shape for a quilted look on hollow pumpkins. (Tip: long, thin grooves at a 45° angle work best.)

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Glowing Globes

These DIY glowing globes and lighted tree turn your entry into a delightfully spooky pathway to Halloween treats.

String your Halloween lanterns along your entry for a proper greeting to the neighborhood goblins.

20 /26 Kate Kunath

Spacing Out

Comets, planets, and stars bring outer space to your front porch. Hang tiny white lights around them to enhance the effect.

21 /26 Kate Kunath/Getty Images

Frankensquash

A green pumpkin with painted “hair” and pieces of stem embellishing its jaws looms out of the darkness on this tabletop.

22 /26 Thomas J. Story

Silhouettes

Create a centerpiece-worthy embossed effect with no candle or seed scooping required. Arrange multiple silhouetted pumpkins along the center of an outdoor table. We added stones and leaves to complete the setting.

23 /26 Kate Kunath/Getty Images

Football season

If you’re a 49ers fan but your neighbor is rooting for the Raiders, try this Halloween pumpkin play on your front porch, using two small pumpkins and two larger ones. On the smaller pumpkins, carve the faces by peeling away the tough outer core but allow the pith underneath to remain. Then hollow out and carve the larger ones (from the bottom instead of the top), and paint them. Slip the larger “helmets” over the smaller “heads”.

24 /26 James Carrier

Party pumpkins

More: How to paint party pumpkins

Tiny pumpkins―or any small gourds―can be colored in minutes with acrylic paints or permanent markers. The secret to their jewel-like sparkle is a finishing glaze applied after the paint or ink has thoroughly dried.

25 /26 Johner Images / Getty Images

Soup time

If you really want to keep things easy for a Halloween treat buffet, try this: Remove the top of a pumpkin or other squash, hollow it out, and use it as a serving bowl for your favorite squash soup.

More: 34 recipes with winter squash

26 /26 Norm Plate

Halloween in a Pot

To decorate your patio or porch with a mini Halloween garden this month, try plants instead of plastic Halloween pumpkins or gossamer ghosts. Combine black foliage with orange blooms in pots of similar hues like ebony and persimmon.