Has the costume parade started in your neighborhood yet? My kids have been trying on costumes for at least a month, and each has settled on a final masterpiece. They settled weeks ago. Truthfully, they’ve probably been planning for a year, but I have “Don’t talk to me about Halloween until September” policy that is little more sophisticated than sticking my fingers in my ears and singing loudly. Now the season is really here, and this past week we’ve had to see the costumes several times again in order to show best friends.
“Mama, do you want to see my costume again?”
“Of course, I do.” And I really do.
One New Thing
In order to avoid the wicked impulse to buy new off-gassing costumes annually, my family follows a one-new-thing rule. Everyone is allowed one new thing. Over time, the new thing has been simpler by their own choice. The new thing isn’t such a big deal now, and we are all happy to work with what we already have or what we can borrow.
I have been seeing these creatures parading around.
My Son the Cave Goblin
This is a character out of HackMaster, a game my son plays frequently.
My Daughter the Witch
Especially as we deconstruct cultural baggage about witches (including the child-friendly version of Wicked that I’ve been telling her), a witch costume ends up being a proud costume for my daughter.
Easy Halloween Costumes from Our Past
Dinosaur Baby
80s college student
Chef
Buffalo
Clown
Frida Kahlo
Fairy
Panda
More recently, the characters have been darker: one year a vampire, another year a devil, then the next year a dev-pire (my daughter’s ingenious combination of the two previous years’ costumes). Keeping these within the same general theme has made it easy for my daughter to keep up the standard of scariness she insists upon.
The Rest of the Family, Too
The 80s college student costume plays on my own tendencies in Halloween dress up. One year I was all in black and said I was a shadow. Next year, I added a 5-foot tall witch’s hat. Next year, I wore a long cat tail. I like to keep to Halloween tradition.
Daddy Wears a Kilt
He’s really not sure what it is, but this was a special request from his co-workers. He’s very obliging. This would blend really well with last year’s nerd costume (old glasses with tape, pocket protector), but this year that’s just too much like what he wears every day.
Mama the Witch
I am just going to wear the giant witch hat again. This is the most my family can get out of me. The hat works perfectly with my daily stay-home costume (black jeans and whatever’s on top). In last year’s window shopping, I saw a great pair of high-heeled witch shoes with a curled up toe. Love them. That’s on my list to get one year, but the world will have to settle for big, black boots again this year.
Poor Poodle Cow
There has been talk of adding white spots to our black dog to create some kind of reverse Holstein cow, but I’m not sure the dog will be thrilled with this. This one I will believe when I see.
My husband and I aren’t much for dressing up, but we love Halloween and we really are in the true spirit of our favorite holiday.
Reuse for a Green Halloween
As you and your children plan your final Halloween costume masterpieces, look around to see what you will be able to reuse from dress-up and Halloweens past.
Green Halloween Costume Resources
Image © Brad Calkins | Dreamstime.com
[...] This seems like an easy one for me because I’ve been working on it for several years and my children are on board. My son made a scythe from sticks, and my daughter gathered grasses for a witches broom. From other [...]
[...] is the most important of the three Rs of Reduce Reuse Recycle. We can reduce in small ways, like reusing Halloween costumes from year to year, but this is really only a very first step. We need to become aware enough of our full impact, then [...]
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