Halloween Online Halloween Skeletons - The Halloween Boneyard
BUYING GUIDE DISPLAY IDEAS TIPS & FX RESOURCES HOME

HALLOWEEN SKELETON TIPS & FX
Below are just a few ways you can enhance the look of your Halloween skeleton

GLOW-IN-THE-DARK SKELETON
Painting your skeleton with fluorescent paint will make them glow eerily under black lights enhancing there overall effect. The Black Light Hair Spray from Fun World is great for adding a glow-in-the-dark effect to your skeleton and other props. Available during the Halloween season, this spray goes on nearly transparent and should be sprayed onto the prop as evenly as possible. It helps to spray the paint on while the prop is lit under a black light so you can actually see the paint going on. Position the skeleton as desired and illuminate with a black light (a 4 foot black light work best for this).

DISTRESSING YOUR SKELETON
Remember that the Bucky skeleton is manufactured primarily for the medical industry and is not meant to look as though it has been buried for a hundred years, so some improvements need to be made for it to look like it just came out of a grave. You can distress your Bucky skeleton using our "Exhumed Skeleton" process to give its bones that ancient, weathered look. We developed a process to give the Bucky skeleton just that look. Click here for complete how-to instructions.

GLOWING EYES
Use a Glow Stick to give your skeleton ominous glowing eyes. First, you will need to drill out a large hole through each eye socket of the Bucky skeleton's skull and into its cranium with a one inch spade drill bit. Next, paint what remains of the eye sockets and inside of the cranium with flat black craft paint. When you are ready for the eyes to glow just activate and place a Glow Stick inside the cranium and replace the skull cap. The light will glow through the eye sockets. Glow sticks are available in many different colors. We like to use either red or green.

FLICKERING EYES
To create a flickering eyes effect
we use the "Artificial Candle Pumpkin Light" from PumpkinLights.com. These units flicker like a real candle using three super bright yellow LED's. They also have the "Amazing Rainbow Pumpkin Light" that changes between seven different colors. First, you will need to drill a large hole through each eye socket of the Bucky skeleton's skull and into its cranium with a standard half-inch drill bit. Next, paint what remains of the eye sockets and inside of the cranium with flat black craft paint. Now you just switch on and place the Pumpkin Light inside the cranium and replace the skull cap. The light will flicker through the eye sockets.

COB WEB COVERED SKELETON
To spray cob-webs on the skeleton you can use a drill-mounted cob-web shooter or a new product called "Cob Webs in a Can" to give your skeleton a cob web covering. This aerosol can webbing adds light layers of spider web effects to your Halloween props and decorations. Once dry it is non-flammable and the finished color is an opaque, dull cream. Note - This material will adhere itself to whatever you spray it on and the residue should be considered permanent so make sure that you aren't spraying anything valuable.

ANIMATED TALKING SKULL OR SKELETON
One of the most versatile and cost effective animatronic's you can buy. The Talking Skull's jaw movement is synchronized with the talking CD. It can be used as a stand-alone prop or used to replace the standard skull on a Bucky skeleton (some modifications to the Bucky skeleton are needed). Connect two together and use with one of their dual-talking CD's and they will talk back and forth. You can even record your own custom talking CD if you have a CD burner in your computer and recording software. Comes with bright LED eyes.

MUMMIFIED SKELETON
Transform your skeleton into a mummy. For the material you can use either an old white bed sheet or buy cheese cloth from a local fabric store. Cut or tear the material into long strips three inches wide. To stain the material so that it looks very old, soak it in cold coffee or strong tea for a few hours. Coffee tends to make the material darker, while tea is lighter. Hang the strips of material to dry - Do not dry them in your dryer as the coffee or tea will come off inside the dryer and the next load of clothes you dry could get stained. Once dry, you can use the strips of cloth to wrap the skeleton like a mummy.

CHAINED-UP SKELETON
You can actually find chain made from plastic instead of metal at your local hardware store that can be used in many different ways with a skeleton. You can use plastic chain to suspend a skeleton from his wrists between two wooden poles. Or you can chain him to a chair or even a wall. Note - You may need to strengthen the skeletons wrist, elbow and shoulder joints with plastic cable-ties to be able to support the weight.

SKELETON 101
From paper cuts-outs to full sized anatomically correct models, the human skeleton is one of the most recognizable figures in Halloween lore. Also known as the day of the Dead, its a time when the spirits of the departed can return to the earthly plane and visit or haunt the living. So, knowing a little bit more about the human skeletal structure might help out when working with skeletons for Halloween decoration and props. Click here to learn more about how the human skeletal structure works.

BLOODY BONES
You can paint bones to look like the flesh has been recently stripped off using blood red craft paint in a squeeze bottle. We like to buy a couple of ten pound bags of assorted bones from the
Anatomical Chart Company and enhance them with red paint. Then we put them in a pile on the porch.

Halloween Skeletons - The Halloween Boneyard
 
   
 

The Halloween Boneyard website (halloweenboneyard.com) © copyright 2001 - 2006 * All rights reserved.