How to Celebrate Halloween

Thứ bảy - 27/04/2024 01:14
Halloween (also known as All Hallow's Eve, All Saint's Eve, and Samhain in some parts of the world) falls on the 31st of October every year. For many people who celebrate it, the holiday is a chance to get together with friends and family...
Table of contents

Halloween (also known as All Hallow’s Eve, All Saint’s Eve, and Samhain in some parts of the world) falls on the 31st of October every year. For many people who celebrate it, the holiday is a chance to get together with friends and family and have some spooky fun. There are all sorts of exciting ways to get in on the festivities of Halloween, from costume parties and macabre decorations to special seasonal activities like trick-or-treating, pumpkin carving, and hair-raising ghost tours.

Method 1
Method 1 of 3:

Planning a Halloween Party

  1. Step 3 Mix up some putrid Halloween punch.
    Start with a blend of fizzy soda pop and tangy fruit juices—you’ll find lots of simple and tasty recipes online. Once you’ve got your punch tasting the way you want, add a few drops of food coloring to make it resemble blood, yucky green slime, or bubbling purple witches’ brew.[4]
    • To make a simple yet satisfying Halloween punch, combine 2 litres (68  fl oz) of ginger ale with 4 cups (950 mL) of pineapple juice, 12 cup (120 mL) of fresh-squeezed lemon juice, and a few scoops of lime sherbet. Serve your punch in a plastic cauldron on top of a block of dry ice for added "witchiness"![5]
    • For a more gruesome touch, create edible "eyeballs" by stuffing blueberries into larger lychee berries and plop them into your punch so they stare back at your guests from the surface.[6]
    • If you're planning on serving alcohol at your party, consider whipping up a second bowl of punch that you can spike with your favorite liquor. Label your punches to indicate which is which, and keep your alcoholic concoctions off-limits to underage guests.

    Tip: Make sure you and your guests drink responsibly. Call an Uber or make up the couch at the end of the night for anyone who’s had a little too much.

  2. Step 6 Screen a selection of scary movies.
    Turn your home into a theater of terror with a private showing of some hair-raising fright flicks. Stick with timeless classics like Halloween, Night of the Living Dead, The Exorcist, or House on Haunted Hill, or scare the living daylights out of your guests with chilling new offerings like IT, Get Out, The Nun, or the Pet Sematary remake.[10]
    • Only show movies that are appropriate for the average age of your guests. The last thing you want to do is give some poor child nightmares! If you're looking for some kid-friendly titles, try Beetlejuice, The Adams Family, Hocus Pocus, Casper the Friendly Ghost, Frankenweenie, or Hotel Transylvania.
    • If there’s going to be alcohol at your party, start a drinking game for of-age guests who want to play along with the movies you’re watching. For instance, you might take a drink anytime someone screams or a doomed character splits off from the group.[11]
    • Horror movies can make excellent background noise for a Halloween party, even if no one is watching.[12]
  3. Advertisement
Method 2
Method 2 of 3:

Decorating for the Holiday

  1. Advertisement
Method 3
Method 3 of 3:

Enjoying Other Seasonal Activities

  1. Advertisement

Total notes of this article: 0 in 0 rating

Click on stars to rate this article