Great Halloween ideas
• Sneaky jack-o'-lantern
• Beautiful, leafy pumpkins
• Pumpkin bouquet
• Magical pumpkins
• Have a hoot
• Make black cat o'lanterns
• Pumpkin house numbers
• Floating pumpkins
• Party pumpkins
• Globe lanterns
• Halloween delights
• Ghostly gathering
• Spooky spider eggs
• Glow-in-the-dark Halloween
• Halloween in a pot
 
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Great Halloween ideas

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Foliage band pumpkins at house
Thomas J. Story
Pumpkins decorate the front entry.
Beautiful, leafy pumpkins
Bring the season’s most iconic motifs alive in elegant displays for outdoor decor. Get the step-by-step

Glowing vines

Foliage band

Silhouettes

Twinkling branches

Harlequin leaves

More fun Halloween projects

HOW TO CARVE A PUMPKIN

Choose. Select a variety of pumpkin shapes, sizes, and colors. For added personality, select ones with unique stems.

Plan. Before carving, group pumpkins in desired location and map out each one’s design.

Design. Trace real leaves onto paper, or use patterns from botanical “clip art” books (available at bookstores and art-supply stores). Experiment with leaf size and arrangement.

Hollow. With a saber saw or pumpkin-carving tool, cut out the top of each pumpkin. Scoop out seeds and strings with a sturdy metal spoon. Then use a pottery tool called a loup, a small metal ladle, or a melon baller to scrape out as much of the interior as possible, especially where you plan to carve (this will make carving easier and allow for better illumination).

 
Magical pumpkins
Pumpkin bouquet
Make black cat o'lanterns
Sneaky jack-o'-lantern
 
 
Transfer. Before copying a design onto a pumpkin, clean the entire surface with a damp towel, then wipe with another towel until exterior is completely dry. Secure paper to pumpkin with masking tape or pushpins. Use a pushpin, embroidery needle, or metal skewer to prick your design onto the pumpkin.

Carve. Cut along transferred design lines using a saber saw, pumpkin-carving tool, small paring knife, or linoleum-cutting tool (similar to a box cutter). Shorter blades allow more control.

Preserve. To keep your designs looking fresh, apply a thin layer of petroleum jelly or vegetable oil to the pumpkin’s carved crevices.

Light. To get the right amount of glow in a pumpkin lit by candles, use multiple tea lights.

Glowing vines
Thomas J. Story
Glowing vines
GLOWING VINES

Meandering patterns add a whimsical storybook appeal to your arrangement.

Step 1: Cut out top of pumpkin and scrape the interior clean (see instructions).

Step 2: Using a real vine or a vine pattern, transfer design onto pumpkin. (To create your own pattern, use varying sizes of your favorite leaf shape, then draw a vine between the leaves.)

Step 3: Carve leaf shapes by cutting completely through the pumpkin or by scraping a shallow relief. You can combine the two methods, as shown here on the smallest pumpkin.

Step 4: With a scraping tool, carve vine stem about ¼ inch deep, being careful not to break all the way through the pumpkin flesh.

 Foliage band green pumpkin
Thomas J. Story
Foliage band
FOLIAGE BAND

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

Step 1: On a piece of paper long enough to wrap around your pumpkin, trace leaves in a band design. Flip leaves occasionally so stems point in different directions; keep the space between leaf shapes relatively equal.

Step 2: Cut out top of pumpkin and scrape the interior clean (see instructions).

Step 3: Transfer design onto pumpkin, adjusting paper every 6 inches or so to follow the curve of the pumpkin. Check results after the first leaf and, if needed, use a pencil to retrace design directly onto pumpkin flesh.

Step 4: Once design transfer is complete, carve leaf shapes using a carving tool.

Silhouettes pumpkins
Thomas J. Story
Silhouettes
SILHOUETTES

Create a centerpiece-worthy embossed effect with no candle or seed scooping required.

Step 1: Using a large leaf (or a leaf pattern enlarged to fit your pumpkin), transfer design onto the center of an intact pumpkin.

Step 2: With a pencil, draw a complementary shape to frame the leaf design, preferably leaving at least ½ inch of space on all sides of leaf edges.

Step 3: Use a scraping tool to peel away flesh between leaf shape and its frame. With the same tool, carve leaf veins in a freehand pattern.

Step 4: Arrange multiple silhouetted pumpkins along the center of an outdoor table. Add stones or leaves to complete the setting.

Twinkling branches pumpkin
Thomas J. Story
Twinkling branches
TWINKLING BRANCHES

Orange twinkle lights illuminate our vignette.

Step 1: Draw or photocopy a branch design to desired size. Make sure your design has an open pattern with no overlapping limbs.

Step 2: Cut out top of pumpkin and scrape the interior clean (see instructions).

Step 3: Transfer design onto pumpkin.

Step 4: Carve design, first making shallow cuts with a small blade at a 45° angle for precision, then making larger cuts with a serrated carving tool.

Step 5: With an electric drill fitted with a small bit, create holes at branch tips for a berry effect.

Step 6: Cut a small hole for an electrical plug in the back of pumpkin, near its base. Through top opening, place indoor-outdoor twinkle lights inside pumpkin, feeding the cord and plug through the hole in the back. From interior, poke individual lights into berry holes, keeping the remaining lights inside pumpkin or trailing out the back if desired.

Harlequin leaves pumpkins
Thomas J. Story
Harlequin leaves
HARLEQUIN LEAVES

Repeat a single leaf shape for a quilted look on hollow pumpkins (see instructions).

Front left (pictured at right). With a small paring knife, cut long, thin grooves at a 45° angle into pumpkin, being careful not to break all the way through the flesh. Repeat in vertical rows as shown.

Center (pictured at right). Intersperse vertical rows of two leaves with rows of a single leaf, reversing the direction of leaf stem in each row. Along top and bottom of single-leaf rows, cut out triangular notches and depress slightly.

Back right (pictured at right). Cut out leaf shape in two parts, leaving center vein in place, or use a scraping tool (see instructions) to peel away rind inside the design, leaving center vein exposed (we used both techniques on our pumpkin).

More: Fun for Halloween

Published: October 2007