Children's Halloween Costumes
Homemade children's Halloween costumes can be fun to make if
your children help, but you have to consider the cost and time
you put into it if the children are not participating and
learning how to do it with you. Sometimes it can be more
economical to save your time and buy a ready made costume at
the prices now available in the shops.
One way to ensure you do not spend excessive time on making
a costume from the raw material on up, is to start with old
clothes from the family closet or a thrift shop. That way, most
of your effort goes into the fun part your children enjoy being
part of - making the accessories and getting made up for the
part.
Take for example a scarecrow outfit. Somewhere in your
family closets there is likely to be a well worn, torn and
frayed pair of jeans, and an old shirt. You may even be able to
find an old straw hat.
From that foundation costume, glue some straw under the hat
and around the cuffs of the shirt and pants. You might find a
bird you can sit on the hat from your Christmas tree
decorations. From there most of your effort will go into face
painting and finishing off the overall look.
A basic pirate costume could be made from little more than
an old shirt and cut down old jeans, with a bandana around the
head. Your main effort would go into setting up the accessories
such as a broad belt and sword, an eye patch, face painting and
artificial tattoos.
A basic low cost halloween outfit of stretch pants and a
long sleeved turtle top is another way to get the starting
foundation for a costume. A black outfit like this needs only a
black cape and a witch's hat and you have the beginnings of a
witch's costume.
Other colours could become animal costumes with the addition
of a tail, ears, mittens and some face paint. Some costume
shops have partial costumes such as faces, noses, tails and
ears available to add these features to your basic costume. For
a tiger, for example, some black fabric paint on a yellow
outfit could be used to create stripes. A little stuffing under
a yellow outfit and you have the beginnings of a plump Winnie
The Pooh.
Use luminous paint on a black outfit like this to draw a
skeleton front and back and you have a very scary Zombie
costume. Just add some white fabric around the head and some
face paint for a skull.
The Tin Man from the Wizard of Oz could be represented by
spray painting this basic outfit with a metallic paint. Gloves,
old shoes and a hat could also be painted to complete the
costume.
By using this approach, instead of spending a lot of time
cutting out and sewing fabric, most of your effort in making
the costume will go into the fun part that your children will
be more likely to enjoy helping you with.
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