How to Make a Halloween
Jack-o-Lantern
If there is one image that Halloween conjures up for most of
us it is the carved out orange jack-o-lantern pumpkin, with its
ghoulish face lit up by a flickering candle inside.
The original jack-o-lanterns in Ireland and
Scotland were usually made out of turnips, and smaller
than the pumpkin version that has become the standard
Halloween design in America.
The great thing about using a pumpkin is that it is easier
to carve, and you have so much more scope to design an
impressive face on the side of a pumpkin. Pumpkins come mostly
in either grey or orange. It is the orange colour that has
become most associated with Halloween.
Your pumpkin should not be too ripe. There are two main ways
you can tell: when you tap the side of the pumpkin it should
sound firm and not hollow, and it should not have a strong ripe
pumpkin smell. Check the appearance as well. You want a smooth
high and round shape without too many bruises or blemishes, and
good colour. Be careful not to carry your pumpkin by the stem:
it may break off in your hand and you could find your pumpkin
smashed on the floor.
To prepare your halloween pumpkin, first clean and dry it.
Cut a small circle around the stem and remove the top. Dig in
and remove the seeds and soft flesh from inside the pumpkin,
leaving a thick wall of flesh inside the skin. Scrape the
inside until you have a firm and fairly smooth surface all
round, and a flat base where you will stand a candle - one of
those short fat candles is ideal. A large spoon is a good
utensil to use inside a pumpkin. You are now ready to carve the
face onto the pumpkin.
Some people grab a kitchen knife at this point, and start
hacking away. There is a better approach. First, work on your
design. You can buy stencils with intricate halloween
jack-o-lantern faces, or you can design your own on a sheet of
paper with a pen or pencil. You might even find one you could
print from the internet. A great design makes all the
difference to how your jack-o-lantern will look, and will
likely be a lot more detailed than something you work on as you
go.
Place your paper over the pumpkin and hold it where you want
the face to be with some sticky tape. Now work your way around
the design outline with a skewer, or something else that is
sharply pointed, and mark a line of close dots through the
paper and into your pumpkin. When you remove the paper stencil
you will have a clearly marked outline of where you have to
carve the face. This method is much more precise than just
starting to carve without a plan.
If you have a detailed design, you will find most kitchen
knives are less than ideal for getting into all the corners.
They are not designed for carving, and can be downright
dangerous. Firm pumpkins are not easy to cut into, and your
hand could easily slip.
It may seem like over-kill, but head off out to your tool
shed and find your electric drill and a keyhole saw. You will
find it so much easier, quicker and precise to work with good
tools. Drill holes to give your keyhole saw a start, and saw
around the outlines you have made. After all, keyhole saws were
designed precisely for this kind of exacting work, even though
pumpkins may not have been on the tool maker's mind at the
time.
Knock out the pieces when you have cut them out, and trim up
the edges, angles, corners and inside of the pumpkin with a
knife. Place your candle inside, and you will be ready to enter
a jack-o-lantern carving competition with the best of them.
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