Thursday, July 28, 2011

Lets make Halloween a real "Holiday".

I was reading a post on Halloween Forum the other day on how the the Spirit Halloween store wanted to change Halloween Day to the Saturday before. As in, say Halloween falls on a Monday, we would celebrate it on Saturday the 29th. Well, as i don't really agree with changing the date of Halloween just for convenience sake, (there is a historical reason for Oct 31st) this did get me thinking. We need more then one day to celebrate. The other big holidays get two days, Christmas has Christmas Eve, New Years has New Years Eve and everyone knows the night before Thanksgiving is the best night to go out drinking. Oh and I almost forgot, the day after Thanksgiving is Black Friday, another day for Christmas. Where is Halloween Eve?

 Now of course to have a true Halloween Eve, Halloween day would have to become a federal holiday which would give a mandatory day off from work and school. There should be no argument here, who wouldn't want another day off. But this isn't about just being lazy and getting another day off, there is good reason for the two day holiday.

Just think of the possibilities, we could have our Halloween Party’s on Halloween Eve, then go Trick Or Treating and visit the Home Haunts on Halloween day. Or if you have a lot of Home Haunts in your area, that are only up for Halloween, you now have two nights to see them all. If you run a Home Haunt like I do, a second day could really come in handy. Halloween Eve could be the "kid friendly" haunt and Halloween Night could be the no holds bar, scare the shit out of people haunt for the teenagers and adults. And now that we have the whole day on Halloween to Haunt our town, a new day time haunt could be set up for the day trick or treaters.The options are endless.

What happens when mother nature doesn’t want to cooperator? A second day might be the haunts savior as, like I said,  a lot of Home Haunters only run there haunt one day. Now you could have at least one back up day if it rains. It really sucks to work for months on a haunt only to be washed out. 

Kids, now having the day off from school, would be able to trick or treating earlier and have more time to hit more houses to get a crap load more candy. And for the parents who usually spend a ton of money on costumes for there kids and themselves every year, now they can be worn for more then one night. Put that Mike Myers mask and gray coveralls on again and get your moneys worth. Or go the other way and wear two totally different costumes. Halloween Eve could be the Slutty Vampire costume and Halloween Day could be Little Red Riding Hood. This is the only way get the most out of Halloween.

Now I know this will conflict with mischief night, but if you need to toilet paper the neighbors house and put Vaseline in car door handles, we could always move mischief night to the night before Halloween Eve. We get three days for Halloween that way. We can do whatever we want to do when it comes to "our" holiday, and nobody can stop us. With more and more families getting into the Halloween spirit,  and Halloween growing exponentially every year. More traditions have been made, needing more time is needed to do them. Let the Home Haunters, Yard Haunters, Halloween fanatics, enthusiast or all around Halloween lovers band together and bring a true Halloween and Halloween Eve to life.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

When Failure Is The Only Option.

About 8 years ago I thought of building a new animated prop for my Halloween Party / Haunt. It was going to be your typical "Creature In A Crate" prop. I saw it on a website somewhere but not wanting to spend the $1500.00 price tag, I figured I would just build it myself. Now you have to remember, this was before You-Tube videos were around and the website only had a picture and a short description. So this was all trial and error, as most builds are, but lets just say I had a shit load of error. The build went like this, I needed it to be lite, so I could store it in my attic. It also couldn't be to big that it wouldn't fit through a door jamb. I started with ¼ inch Hardy Board for the shell of the crate, this is that brown backer board normally used as cabinet backing which is light weight and cheap to get. (This was my first mistake, great for cabinet backing, sucks for Halloween props). I made the box and screwed 1 x 2 rough sawn wood to go around the edges and in a criss cross pattern on the top and sides to give that “wooden crate look”. I put a hinged door in the front so I could get access to the mechanics inside. The door had a window with bars made from ¾ electrical conduit. I then made a small pallet, out of the same 1 x 2s I used for the edges, that was about 3 inches bigger then the crate on all four sides to fit under it. I ran heavy chain from the top four corners, using screw in I-bolts, to the bottom of the pallet, leaving some slack for the crate to bang around. This was to give the appearance that the monster inside was so crazy only chains could keep it tied down. But as I think about it now, it's ridiculous in real life, have you ever seen an animal shipped with chains holding the box down.( I guess it just looked cool), Anyway, I sprayed the whole thing with black, gray, and red spray paint to give it a old burnt dirty look. It did look nice and if I were smart I would have just stopped there and made it a static prop. (oh the money I would have saved) But I wanted it to shake, jump and rattle like a monster was inside.

I had an old 120v motor out of a floor standing belt sander that I wanted to use for the shacking. I made a a 6 diameter alum plate with a hole drilled 2 inches off center. I cut a slot into the bottom of the crate and had the alum plate stick through it. The idea was, when the motor spun the plate around, it would hit the top of the pallet and lift the whole crate up and bang it around violently, like a big cam. (This would be another mistake. You know the kind a horse power you need to lift a wooden box with the weight of motor and chains attached? Well neither did I and I still don't. But I bet a lot more then ¾ horse) The motor was hooked up to a Terror By Design prop controller and a dimmer switch to adjust the speed. OK, now for the moment of truth. I plugged in all in and hit the little red button on the controller and BAM. The plate spun around hitting the top of the pallet and STOPPED DEAD. The motor wasn't strong enough to lift the crate. Well after some brain storming I thought I would just lift the motor so that the plate doesn’t hit the pallet and will just vibrate the crate violently. I did that and hooked it all up, hit the red button and holly shit did this crate shack, jump, vibrate, and just go nuts. It looked great. But just as I was admiring my new creation, I saw the top start to come lose from the sides, and then one of the eye bolts ( that was holding the chains down) ripped out of the wood. With out that one chain, it moved off to the side of the pallet ripping the other 3 chains out making the crate totally flip on its side. The motor, now hanging upside down, rips out the wood and acts like a jackhammer and blows the rest of the crate apart. It stopped only after the motor ripped its own cord from its back. All this happened within 15 seconds. Almost all the screws ripped out the Hardy board and 1 x 2s, the wiring was a big tangled mess and all that was left, was a pile of scrap wood. I stared at it for about a minute, then walked out of my workshop and did not come back to clean up the destroyed prop till the next weekend. (No, that picture is not the prop. But thats almost what it looked like.)

So what did we learn here?

Sometimes cheap isn't always the best way to go.

If I would have used ½ plywood or ½ solid wood planks for the crate box is would have stayed together. Try to stay away from Hardy Board, Particle Board, MDF, OSB or anything like that. Solid wood, plywood or metal only.

I should have put inside corner bracing to keep it from racking. Anywhere you can put bracing is a good idea for any animated prop. Blocks of wood, angle alum, steal brackets are all good.

Should have used wood screws or even better, deck screws instead of drywall screws. They may cost more but there heads won't pop off under a load.

Instead of the screw in I-bolts for the chains, I should have used bolt through I-Bolts with a nut and oversized washer.

I should have used through bolts to mount the motor instead of screws. Just like the screw in I-bolts, there is alot less of a chance of pull through.

I could have skipped the motor all together and used a pneumatic piston to pop the crate around. A linear movement is a lot easier to control then a spinning movement. And in would have looked much more real.

And the biggest thing I should have done was to test it before I finished it. That would have saved me the most time and money. Always test your mechanism before you build. Be it a 4-bar lifter, a scissor reacher or a simple pop up, make sure it works. That way you can make changes before your to deep into it.

Good luck on your build.

Saturday, July 16, 2011

Find the time to do other Fall things.

Sometimes being a Home Haunter you miss out on a lot of the Fall season. Of course, as with all haunters and Halloween lovers, Fall is my favorite time of the year. But I get so focused on that one day or one week when my haunt is up and running, I miss out on what Fall has to offer. Yes, I know, you never seem to have enough time to finish that last corpse or get that garbage can to pop open ONLY when someone walks by it (f**king motion sensors) but you still need to stop and have some fun. So as I write this in the beginning of summer and I'm getting ready to hit the beach, I'm going to make a Fun Fall Things-To-Do list. And why not, we plan our haunts out months or even a year in advance, why not set some goals to get out of the basement or garage and into the clean crisp Fall air.

1) Carve a pumpkin. This should be an easy one, and every year I say to Nichole "We got to get pumpkins to carve." and every year we get those pumpkins but never find time to carve them. So this year we will get the "perfect" pumpkin and stab the shit out of it with a non child safe kitchen knife till it looks something like a jack-o-lantern.

2) Take a drive to see the Autumn colors. Load up the family, in my case that's Nichole and my dog Max, and take a drive to the closes wooded area. Now, if you live in a city or surrounded by palm trees, you might have to drive a little further. But let me tell you, it is well worth it. No other time a year can you see how beautiful mother nature can be.

3) Go on a hay ride. Hey rides are great. Slowly moving down that dirt path on our way to the pumpkin patch, sitting on wet bails of hey,(why are they always wet) is the perfect way to help you forget that your pneumatic piston just blew through your coffins lid right after you just finished all the detail work.

4) Go to a farm. Now maybe this should be first on the list because you can get your pumpkins to carve, see autumn colors on the way there, and get to ride on a hay ride. But I like to go to different places for different things. I know this great farm just for pumpkins and little Halloween shit. Then I go to a different place for the best pumpkin ice cream here in NJ. Then another place for their hay ride and yet another place for a corn maze.

5) Do a corn maze. Corn mazes can be a lot of fun. Try to find one that only takes about a ½ hour to get through. Any longer and it starts to get boring and any shorter makes you think you paid to much. Also, some mazes give prizes if you find different objects throughout the maze. Prizes always make it extra fun, even if your only winning a pencil eraser.

6) Eat pumpkin everything. Pumpkin Donuts, Pumpkin Muffins, Pumpkin Ice Cream, Pumpkin Pie, Pumpkin Coffee, Pumpkin Cookies....The great part about this step is you can do this as your working on your haunt. Theirs nothing like sipping on a pumpkin coffee, and eating pumpkin donuts while gluing your fingers together with Right Stuff Triple Expanding Foam.

7) Go to every Party City, Halloween Express, Spirit Halloween or any other Halloween store around your town. Do I even need to explain this one?

8) Go to a big Amusement Park Halloween Night. Every Amusement park does something for Halloween and most are very good at it. Nichole and I always try to make it to Great Adventures Fright Fest each year. The big parks always cost a lot but to be surrounded by Halloween and horror, like "big money haunts" can do, it's worth it. Everyone knows Universal Studios Horror Nights and how big there displays are. Then of course you got Disney's Not So Scary Halloween, which is just great all around. With hundreds of parks around you should be able to hit at least one.

9) Go to your local Pro Haunts. Another no brainier for a haunter, but sometimes in the time crunch to get things done, we can't get to a pro haunt. When I'm burnt out and don't feel like unclogging another fog machine, going to a pro haunt is a good re-energizer. We know most pro haunt owners started out as home haunters, so to see there haunts in action gives me the drive to keep pushing on.

10) Drive around and see other home haunts. Home Haunters have a special bond, so its easy to approach a fellow haunter and talk about there haunt. Don't go there comparing whose haunt is better or whose Bucky skeleton looks more dead. (Even though you know yours would rock theirs) Show them some love, they've been working just as hard as you. Home Haunters come up with some of the greatest ways to make props on the cheap. Spreading that knowledge is great way to incorporate new ideas into your own haunt and give someone an idea for theirs.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Am I Weird?

Some people just don't get why Home Haunters do what they do for the great All Hallows Eve. Every haunter knows that look you get from the haters out there when that first tombstone goes up or you put more then 2 pumpkins in your front yard. These same people can stare at a house with 100,000 Christmas Lights, and a freaky ass Santa waving for hours, but can't bare the sight of a house with a coffin on the front lawn and a couple body parts here and there. I was told by a neighbor on the first day of my set-up, "I guess someone likes to celebrate DEATH" and as I turned and looked at her face of pure disgust, I said with a smile... "I love it". Then I went back to hanging a dead kicking girl from my tree. It's those kind of people I feel sorry for. To not be able to let go and enjoy Halloween should be a sin. It's not a celebration of death, it's a celebration of life. You never feel more alive then when you are about to shit yourself from a good scare. When you get scared, you go through so many emotions. Take a simple "pop up" scare for instance. Your walking around a gloomy cemetery, checking out the tombstones and skeletons, the rickety fence that tells you to keep out. The lights are flashing and the sound of foot steps and chains are coming from a distance. But just as you go to have a closer look at the twitching rat in a rat trap, a skull pops out from behind a tombstone. You jump back, your heart is racing and scream out in fear. Then as the skull slowly resets to scare someone else. You realize what it was and that it is not real. Your heart slows down and your breathing returns to normal. You begin to laugh and look around to see who else got scared. They are laughing right with you or maybe laughing at you. And then a slight feeling of embarrassment sets in, as your a grown man who just screamed like a little girl  from a Party City foam skull, popping up behind a Styrofoam tombstone. You check to see if you peed yourself and move on. Now if that's celebrating "death", then send me to hell now because that seems funny as shit. I don't do an over the top display for Halloween to worship the devil. I do it for the reaction I get out of people. That scream from a 5 year old kid, to the hand shake from the 50 year old dad who says "this is awesome". That's why I do it, that's why we all do it. (Well.... maybe we also do it because we want the best haunted house around.)  Keep on Haunting guys and girls. We love Halloween and we are not scared to show it....(But is that only because were Weird?)

Monday, July 11, 2011

Halloween Parties!!!!

This will be the second year for our yard haunt Pandemic Cemetery. As some already know, our haunt used to be an indoor Halloween party / haunt for family and friends called the Metuchen Slaughter House. All though I love doing the new yard haunt that everyone can see, I really miss the parties we used to throw. So to help all the my fellow haunters out there who still throw a Halloween Party, I've put a list together of the best ways to have one kick ass Halloween party.

1) Make sure every room that your guest are going to have access to is fully decorated. Nothing is worse then walking through a haunted library with flying ghost and moving books, and then walking into a floral bathroom with cute towels and Dove Body Wash. Keep your guest in the Halloween mood. 

2) Make sure you have a room that people can get away from “Halloween” for a bit. Yeah, I know that goes against the first rule, but 6-7 hours in death and darkness, or clowns and strobe lights does start to get to everyone. Any room that's not decorated, that  has normal lights and is away from the thunder, body parts and bat droppings is great for people to take a little break and get re-energized if there over loaded.

3) EVERYONE MUST COME IN A COSTUME. It's a Halloween party. The guy in the corner with jeans and a t-shirt on, that thinks he's way to f**king cool for a costume, is a real party killer.

4) Have prizes for a costume contest. You wouldn't think it but those stupid plastic trophy’s from Party City can really get people motivated to get in some over the top costumes. (Make sure to buy one for Sexiest Costume) Also, a couple gift cards are great prizes. I usually went with $25 1st place, $15 2nd place and some party gifts for the runner ups. Like candy bags and severed limbs.

5) Got to have good music. Don't just play Midnight Syndicate all night long. There are tons of great Halloween themed music that goes great for Halloween parties. And I don't care what age group this party is for... You have to have “The Monster Mash”.

6) You can't have a good party without good food. Most Halloween parties start later at night so finger foods are great. The types of foods people can stand and eat are the way to go. Check out what Martha Stuart is making for Halloween that year and do that. And I always have tons of candy in Halloween buckets and witches cauldrons placed all over the house. It is Trick or Treat time after all.

7) Spread the food out. People tend to hang around were the food is at, and if your house is on the small side or your 8 foot Frankenstein is taking up way to much space, put the food at several smaller tables to keep your guests moving around.

8) Alcohol is a Halloween Party favorite. (Well that goes for most parties) But when you have a 60 year old, 6ft 3in, 245 lb guy walking around in a tooth fairy costume, you better have some alcohol around. Have a good variety that both men and women will like. (A keg of beer is not going to cut it)

9) Keep garbage cans in every room. For some reason, when people go to Halloween parties they forget how to throw shit out. I guess it's because, it's dark, the house looks like a torture chamber, and with all the fog, why not throw the candy wrappers on the floor. But extra garbage cans are helpful to save on the dreaded next day clean-up.

10) Have fun!!! As the party host, it's hard to sometimes step back from serving drinks, getting food out, and helping the girl puking and peeing all over herself after drinking to much. But have some fun of your own. Dance, eat, and drink with your family and friends. If you planed it right, the party will take care of itself.

Friday, July 8, 2011

A new way to paint a Haunt Wall.

I'm still working on my new workshop. The good thing about turning my shop into a Dungeon is that I'm learning new paint and decorating techniques. Each wall I do comes out better and better, almost to the point where I want to go back and do the first wall all over again. (But I’m not) This new paint technique I’ve been using is so easy and so quick to do. You could do a 10 x 10 room in about an 2 hours start to finish, and that includesdry time between coats! I'm going to make a how-to video of the process and put it up on You-Tube and my website, but until then I will give a quick run down here for ya.

You will need:

Black flat latex paint
Dark Tan gloss latex paint (or any color you want as your primary color)
Wood stain (Mahogany, Red Chestnut, something dark)
Latex Gloves
Paint Brushes
Clean Rags
A bucket or small pail

First, Paint around the edge of the wall with the black latex paint. Only paint 10 to 12 inches from the edge.

Let that set up for about 5-10 mins, do not let dry!

Next, with a brush, paint on the dark tan latex paint moving in long up and down strokes. The black will mix with the tan giving a streaked look. Go over the whole wall keeping the edges more black and the middle more tan. You will see what I mean when you do it.

Let that dry a half hour or so. Use a fan to speed up dry time. It doesn’t need to be completely dry, just make sure it’s not wet enough to wipe off.

Pour some wood stain in a small bucket. Soak a clean rag in the stain and rub it on the wall, again using long up and down strokes. Wipe off excess stain with a clean dry rag. Do this as many times as you want. The more coats of stain, the darker and grungier the wall becomes. (I only put on 2 coats but you might want more) No need to let it dry between coats. The sticker the stain gets between coats the better the look.

And that’s it. One finished Halloween Haunt wall.

Monday, July 4, 2011

Lets get ready to get ready.

With only a couple months till Halloween, I really need to get moving on the new Pandemic Cemetery design for 2011. I know I want a walk through, I already have the 10 by 20 foot tent I bought a little while back. And I could easily fill it will props and animatronics from when I had The Metuchen Slaughter House. But how am I going to bring it all together into one haunt. The Metuchen Slaughter House was set into three shows, with 3 different thyme's. I had the torture room, the incantation room, and the toxic room. Now its all going into Pandemic, a graveyard thyme. I am a full believer in  having a good story line. So I guess I will start there..... When bringing a story to life you have to ask these basic questions.....Were did the haunt come from? Why is it still there? Who or what is the haunt about? Who is the main character? (there should always be a main scarier) and for who is this haunt going to scare? (kids, teenagers, adults, everyone).  Once I get all that together, then I will start building.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Starting a NEW Blog.

I thought it would be easier for me to blog on Blogger then my own website, so I'm going to try it out. I moved all my old blog posts over to here, so the dates are going to be all screwed up.( its all the same post date) But no big deal, no one reads this shit anyway.

Back from the Haunters Convention

I'm finally putting the video up from the National Haunters Convention. I have been so busy lately that its hard to find time to put these videos together. But when you love doing something, you find time... The show was good. I say good, not great, because we just got back from Transworld and that show is just amazing. (Check out our Transworld videos below) Transworld makes all other shows seem small and disappointing. But in all actually, it's not that the Haunters Convention is small, it's just catered more for the home haunter then the pros. Lots of high quality masks and static props to see. A couple "foam" weapon manufactures were there with axes, sledge hammers, giant wrenches and swords. Some smaller animated props and animatronics were lurking around. Lighting, smoke and bubble machines, webbing, creepy cloth, camo netting, smelly scents...... just about any special effects making "thing" was there. But like I said, more for the home haunter, then anyone else. I will definitely be going back next year.


National Haunters Convention

This weekend is the National Haunters Convention in Pennsylvania. It's like the Transworld Haunt Expo but not as big and geared not only to professional haunted attractions but to Home Haunters as well. This is going to be our first year going to this convention, but from the YouTube videos I have seen, it looks awesome. Although we will only be able to make the show on Sunday, I would have loved to have gone today. Tonight is the Haunted House Bus Tour that takes guest to 8 Haunted Attractions with a lights on tour and a lights off tour for all 8. Now that's cool !! Anytime you can get a behind the scenes tour of a Haunt with the lights on is a definite must see. But because of time constants there is no way we could do it this year. We will be there all day Sunday and I will make sure to take lots of "good" video to put on the site. I really hope to see some good quality props for the home haunters. Not the cheap plastic and styrofoam shit you find at Party City. Since Halloween has become so big in recent years and more and more people are going bigger with their Home Haunts, the prices have started to come down just a little bit, bringing the pro quality props in reach of the Home Haunters. And I've also seen prices come down for prop making supplies for the do-it-yourselfers out there. Better props at better prices is always a good thing.

Well the time has come to start thinking about our home haunt Pandemic Cemetery.

With 6 months till Halloween, its a great time to start planning some of the new improvements. And let me tell you, this is going to be a huge year. ALL the props, animatronics, special effects, and lighting that we had for The Metuchen Slaughter House is now going to join the rest of Pandeimc Cemetery. I just got a 10ft x 20 ft tent that is going to become the new Haunted house. Its not going to be a walk through, more of a "look in". (NJ laws are very strict when it comes to things like that) People will only be able to walk around the cemetery and the look into the haunted house, which I think will work out really good. I'm also working on a new story line. As every true haunter knows, you have to have a back story. A good story breaths life into your haunt. If you don't, all you got is a bunch of meaningless props, scattered around your house, pretending to be scary.

Transworld The Dark Zone


The Transworld show has an area that is called The Dark Zone, and as the name says, it's dark. It's where you can get a feel for how the animated props look when there in the light their suppose to be in. As everyone knows, a fake looking prop can look somewhat real in a dark foggy scene and a high quality prop can truly look and "feel" real with the proper lighting. They had some real over the top props there. I really loved the Necromancer made by Scarefactory. It's over 16 ft tall sitting and stands up to about 20 ft. To get an idea on how big this monster of a monster was, he has 3 normal size animated props and a full sized coffin strapped on its back and a full size man thrashes in its hand! Truly a site to see. Nichole loved the levitating bed and the window spectre, also from Scarefactory. These are great for a haunted bed room scene. The one thing that was missing was fast moving, startling animated props. Don't get me wrong, there were a couple good ones, but not as many I would have liked to see. I like insanely fast, thrashing, convulsing, shaking, scare the shit out of you movement. And I don't just mean a Trash Can Trauma or Barrel Popper. I can't wait for next year to see whats new for 2012.

Transworld Interactive Haunted House

I wanted to put up a separate video of the Interactive Haunted House that was inside the Transworld expo. Everything you see in the haunted house was from the venders at the expo. Different companies brought props, animatronics and special effects together to show how their products look in a working haunted house. For something put together pretty quick, the haunt looked really good. Although there were only a few animatronics and just your basic ones at that, the detailing was very good. And something you can not get from watching the video is the disgusting smells throughout the house.(from Froggy's Fog) It really brought you into the scene. Especially in the butcher shop part. It smelled like rotting flesh. Awesome!!! On Friday night the hole Interactive Haunted House was auctioned off. The final bid was $6500.00 for everything inside. Some thought it was a good price but others said it was way to much. I guess some things are just worth more to others. But in the end it was a pretty cool setup.


Pandemic Haunt Production is back from the 16th annual Halloween and Attraction Show in St Louis MO.

It was such a great time, we had so much fun. There was so much to see and do. The booths were just amazing and the people were great to talk to. Its great to be around people that have the same passion and love for haunted houses as we do. I put together a small video of the expo floor, to show just some of the things that blew us away. But to be honest, this video does the expo no justice. To get the hole experience, you have to be there in person. You have to see, hear, feel and smell everything that is going on around you. It truly is a MUST SEE show.

Pandemic is going to Transworld Halloween & Attraction Show

This should be a great expo. Anyone who knows anything about the haunt world knows this is the show to be at. This is where you find the best in the industry. From the top prop builders in the U.S. to the true Einsteins of horror. From 15 ft monsters to tiny led lighted eyes, there is something for any and every type of haunted attraction their is. This will be our first time attending transworld, and we have very high expectations on what we will find there. Its going to be a great place for us to start our animated prop line. To see what the latest and greatest is today is going to be a huge help in designing and building something even better. Even more inportant is finding out what's selling and whats not. We can't wait to get there!