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Halloween Propmaker's Handbook | 
enlarge | Author: Ken Pitek Publisher: McFarland Company Category: Book
List Price: $35.00 Buy New: $31.50 You Save: $3.50 (10%)
New (13) Used (5) from $29.99
Rating: 4 reviews Sales Rank: 115780
Media: Paperback Pages: 264 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 9.8 x 6.9 x 0.7
ISBN: 078642463X Dewey Decimal Number: 394.2646 EAN: 9780786424634 ASIN: 078642463X
Publication Date: August 21, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description With some corn syrup, drink mix powder and water, you can make a splendid concoction of stage blood without spending an arm and a leg. From budget-friendly frights to sophisticated props, this book offers dozens of imaginative ways to haunt a house for Halloween. Readers will find generously illustrated step-by-step instructions for creating a barbecued skull, devil eyes, bonehead tableware, a magic bottle, a glowing brain and other projects. The book details ways to enhance an eerie ambiance with effects like blacklights and music. Props use many common household items and tools. Where specialty items are required, the author tells where they can be found at a reasonable cost. Projects take anywhere from a few hours to several days to complete. PThe chapters ooze with tips on topics like creating apprehension and surprise, using design to guide guests, creatively using plastic skulls, and making papier-mache masks and molded hands. There are recipes for fake blood and vomit and ideas for using them, and other creative and adaptable ideas. Appendices include "Merry Halloween," which advises, "One of the best times to look for bargains on Halloween prop-building materials is right after Christmas"; an alphabetical listing of props and supplies and where they can be found; a list of specialty suppliers; and an "epitaph" inviting comments.
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| Customer Reviews:
Good ideas, but not what I expected... July 19, 2007 R. Parisi (Providence, RI United States) 15 out of 15 found this review helpful
The projects are explained well, the directions are clear, and I feel I would be able to re-create the clever props. Unfortunately there are no instructions for large sized props such as figures, monsters, etc. that are expected in a haunted hosue. All the props are on a small scale..at least half the book is devoted to creating different painting effects on skulls. There are also ideas for masks, brains, severed hands, and other small props such as skull flowers, flatware, salt pepper shakers, candy dish, etc. br /There is useful information on lighting, black lights, adding eyes to a prop, and general setting up of a scene which will help me with my haunted house decorating, but I won't use most of the other projects.
FANTASTIC HALLOWEEN PROJECTS February 11, 2007 Tim Janson (Michigan) 10 out of 11 found this review helpful
When I was a kid growing up in the 70's, Halloween decorations pretty much consisted of those cardboard characters you taped on your windows and light up jack-o-lanterns. Heck the main decoration was the pumpkin you carved yourself. Today, Halloween decorations generate millions each year. There are entire superstores selling nothing but Halloween decor and costumes that spring up every Fall. The Fright Catalog has Hollywood-caliber props that cost in the thousands of dollars. It's easily become the biggest holiday for decorating next to Christmas and getting bigger every year. br / br /The Hollywood Propmaker's handbook is the perfect book for those who love decorating for the season but who don't want to spend all of their hard-earned cash at those stores. The book is written by Keith Pitek whose work has been seen in Haunted Attraction Magazine. Pitek presents some two-dozen projects that can be made with inexpensive items, many of which you might have lying around the house. br / br /Pitek begins by covering various techniques to setting up your outdoor display covering things which seem so simple and make perfect sense such as where to set-up speakers for sound, the best ways to display props, the use of remote controls, and lighting. Pitek also covers the use of black lights, techniques for painting skulls, wiring your props for light, and using two-way mirrors. br / br /In the project section, Pitek provides several different types of skulls using inexpensive plastic skull props that are available at the Halloween stores as well as major retailers. Create one with light up twinkling eyes that doesn't take an electrician to wire; paint one so that it looks like it was just dug up out of a grave. The painting uses common household ingredients such as shoe polish or wood varnish. It's really all in the technique! Perhaps the most ambitious is the barbecued skull, which when finished, will look like it was just retrieved out of an incinerator. br / br /One of my favorite projects, again one which is quite detailed, is the partially eaten hand made with a hand shaped gelatin mold and several other items. Done right, it creates a stunningly realistic looking prop. Pitek also provides a sure-fire recipe for stage blood that can be made with corn syrup and red-colored Kool-Aid. Pitek concludes with a detailed reference section informing readers where the items used in the props can be purchased as well as providing the phone numbers and websites to many different suppliers. br / br /Now, these items are not your average weekend craft projects. Some are quite easy and can be made in an hour. Others are very involved and take many hours, or even days to finish, but the results will be worth it. br / br /Reviewed by Tim Janson br /
Deserves ongoing recommendation for any avid party crafts person November 7, 2006 Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Halloween Propmaker's Handbook arrived too late for October mention but deserves ongoing recommendation for any avid party crafts person who enjoys putting together unique Halloween props. Here are recipes for fake blood, papier-maiche projects such as skills, two-way mirrors, and other techniques just perfect for Halloween decorators. No color photos, but the step-by-step black and white images and clear directions need little color to prove involving. br / br /Diane C. Donovan br /California Bookwatch
Very Very Good September 26, 2006 JMB 3 out of 6 found this review helpful
The instructions in this book are easy to follow with a complete list of necessary items to complete each prop. The author also makes the book easy to read with his personal anecdotes and witty approach to the art of of Halloween "Scareology".
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