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Tricks and Treats

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With this great guide to celebrating the spirit (and spirits) of Halloween, no special magic is needed to enjoy the latest trend in family fun. Tricks & Treats has tons of great ideas for Halloween costumes, decorations, parties and tempting fun foods. Over 50 projects. Includes index.From traditional trick-or-treating school events, and community parades for kids, to masquerade balls for adults, a guide to Halloween is filled with innovative ideas for costumes, pumpkin carving, decorations, parties, and food

144 pages, Paperback

First published August 17, 1998

31 people want to read

About the author

Deborah Harding, author of America's Glorious Quilts and former Crafts and Needlework editor at Family Circle, began her exploration of redwork as a means to satisfy her curiosity about a redwork quilt she purchased at a flea market. As she began to explore the quilt's origins, Deborah discovered nursery rhyme motifs of "Mary, Mary Quite Contrary" and "Who Killed Cock Robin?" within the stitching, along with Beatrix Potter characters including Peter Rabbit, Jemima Puddleduck, and Flopsy, Mopsy, and Cotton-tail. She called the quilt "Mary, Mary Quite Contrary" because of its imagery. Deborah's subsequent collection of textiles and research materials on redwork culminated in the publication of Red & White: American Redwork Quilts and Patterns

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Profile Image for Kathie H.
368 reviews53 followers
August 15, 2009
This is a useful book to have on your craftroom shelf. When you get back from your summer vacation at the seashore, browse this book while you listen to the crickets sing in the morning after you get the kids off to their first days of school. If you look around you, there are signs of autumn everywhere: spider webs on the lawn, yellow leaves falling on the sunniest & warmest of early-September days, morning glories that look (if possible) even more glorious after enjoying a little bit of coolness overnight. Crickets still scratching away as late as 10 AM are a sure sign that harvest fun must be just around the corner.

The introductions to each of the chapters in this book transported me away from the heat & humidity of summer to the cooler days of early autumn. They are a nice addition to the craft instructions & really got me in the Halloween mood.

There are quite a few of what I call "cheesy crafts" in this book, but it's desirable anyway because of the detailed directions & easily-photocopied patterns. I like the addition of a "General Directions" section in the back. I've been sewing & crocheting since I was 7 years old, but this old dog really could use some new tricks, as well as a brushing-up on the old ones.

The Smiling Scarecrow at the beginning of the book is a fun craft that you can put your own unique artistry into & turn out something that the kids will look forward to unearthing from storage every September 21. I like the simple but satisfying Hanging Ghosts - the ones that use balloons & simple papier-mache -because the finished product really is adorable. You won't feel guilty about just throwing these away after Halloween because you'll look forward to making them again next year, so storing them doesn't have to be a concern. I thought these would be particularly spooky if you put a string of mini-lights inside or around their circumference.

There's a lengthy section on kids' costumes. There are so many inexpensive Halloween costumes available at the big-box discount stores that I wouldn't put all the time & energy into making one myself. Use your time sitting with your feet up with a cup of apple-cinnamon tea & a book of Victorian ghost stories while the kids are at school or out playing. Remember: If mama ain't happy, ain't nobody happy. The makeup tips are useful & fun, though.

The Pumpkin Head Family is fun & I bet you find more than a couple of new ideas for a comical front-porch display. I love how the authors used the pumpkins' stems as noses. And you don't have to make a huge mess carving the pumpkins to give your gourd true personality.

The Fun Foods section includes lots of doable "recipes" that will delight your little partygoers. I know my grandchildren especially love to decorate cookies (& then immediately eat them, of course).

The highlight of this book, for me, was the fusible-web Scaredy Cat quilt, Halloween wall-hanging & pillows. I don't use fusible web often, but I know it's easy & quick. I would make the Scaredy-Cat quilt with antique reproduction fabric to make it look like it's vintage. My mind started to race with possibilities looking at these three projects. I also like things I can hang on the wall or use as whimsical decor touches in the living room.

Check Amazon for this book from used-book sellers. I bet you can find it for not more than a couple of dollars & you'll turn to it throughout the year. I love Halloween no matter what month of the calendar it is.
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