Parenting

Saturday, July 4, 2009

DIY Halloween costumes your kids can use again (and again)

Photo Credit: Getty Images

Photo Credit: Getty Images

I loved Jessica's post about how much we're spending on Halloween costumes this year, and reading what Shine users are doing for their kids this Halloween. I'm a big fan of DIY costumes, and was slightly sad when my oldest son told me he wanted to be Darth Vader. He'd been talking this up for weeks. But in a surprising turn of events (heh), now he wants to be a skeleton. And he's super excited about making his costume this weekend. (So am I!)

The main reason I dig DIY costumes is that they are usually comprised of things your kids can reuse, either to play dress up or by removing the embellishments so the costume becomes regular clothes. I also like it when I can use everyday items from around the house. The added bonus? DIY costumes can be done on the cheap and with minimal effort.

With reusable DIY Halloween costumes, you can't go wrong with a few basics: fleece clothes and capes/cloaks. Fleece sweatshirts and pants can be used as the foundation for just about any costume. You just have to dress them up with some simple embellishments and attitude. (Side note: My kid's skeleton costume uses a turtleneck, sweats and black gloves.)

Some favorites:

Fleece pants and sweatshirts: With a pair of sweats, a crewneck sweatshirt (or a turtleneck), and just a few embellishments, kids can dress up as cats, dogs, pigs, monkeys, mice, dragons and just about another animal-related character. Here's how:
  • Go to your local Target, Wal-Mart or craft store and the ears/tail that correspond to the animal your kid wants to be.
  • If your kids don't have them, buy sweats and a matching fleece sweater in the color of the animal. (You can get a complete Hanes set about US$12.) Turn the sweats inside out so that the soft part is showing (and more animal like). For a dog or cow, consider buying white felt, cutting out circles, and ironing the patches onto the sweats using fusible webbing. Even easier, you can use white contact paper instead of felt and webbing. For a dinosaur, you can cut triangles out of heavy cardstock to make a spine and attach them to the sweatshirt with double-sided fabric tape.
  • Use black/brown eyeliner to draw whiskers and a nose on your kid's face, or face paint for other animals.
  • Cover hands with colored socks to match the sweats.
  • After Halloween, you can peel the patches/embellishments off the sweats and voila, a new set of comfy winter wear.
I also found more great ideas for fleece animals over at Fleece Farm. You can adapt each of these to your budget and your desire to get crafty.


Capes/Cloaks/Ponchos:
Add a colored cape or cloak to any fleece outfit and you've got yourself a super hero. Why not Captain Underpants? Okay, hear me out. Kids love reading about the wacky adventures of the infamous Captain Underpants. And this costume is a serious no-brainer for young boys. They can wear their jammies or fleece sweats with a pair of big white briefs over the bottoms.  If you have a red bed sheet or tablecloth, fold it in half and let your kid use it as a cape. They can secure it just like Captain Underpants -- with a simple knot. If you need to buy one, you can find them at Target or any store that sells Halloween costumes and online for under $US10. And I guarantee your kid will use that cape again.

Other options:
  • Superman: Red cape, blue sweats and socks.
  • Darth Vader: Black cape, black sweats and a black turtle neck. Buy a plastic light saber or make one out of newspaper. And you can pick up an inexpensive mask at just about any store that sells Halloween costumes.
  • Bat Girl: Blue cape, gray sweats/tights and great turtleneck. You can make a simple mask out of black felt. And a pair of rain boots could add a fun touch.
  • Super Girl: Any mix of colored capes, sweats/tights and turtlenecks along with glittery shoes and fun ribbons in their hair and bracelets, a la Wonder Woman. Let your daughter decide what her super power will be!
On a previous post, a Shine user mentioned some cool superhero pajamas that come with a removable cape. The bottoms are long and warm, so easily wearable on Halloween night. Both of my boys love these and we found them at Target for under $US15. And they can be used all year.

What are some of your favorite DIY costumes that you've made for your kids? Comment with your stories or post your ideas/instructions and I'll do a round up!


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From the Community…

Comments 1-7 of 7
  • Rashmi's Avatar
    Posted by Rashmi Thu Oct 16, 2008 6:08pm PDT

    great idea!

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  • Bellisima's Avatar
    Posted by Bellisima Thu Oct 16, 2008 9:31pm PDT

    Don't forget the kitty ears :) YOu can never outgrow them :) You can always put a twist on you costumes :)

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  • Disgruntled's Avatar
    Posted by Disgruntled Fri Oct 17, 2008 10:37am PDT

    I used to make all my son's costumes and I will say the cape is very useful. My son decided to be a Viking one year and a king the next so for the Viking I made a plain tan cape out of flannel and when he was the king, I sewed some fake fur trim on it.

    I'd also add that a plain black "Lone Ranger" style mask can be very handy for costumes. You can also take those free Burger King cardboards crowns and paint over them for a cheap easy crown for your king, queen or princess. I once made my son a cheap costume out of large pieces of felt and some velcro. He went as a deck of cards and the costume got tons of compliments and took me less than 2 hours and $10 to make. He just wore it over red sweats he already had.

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  • kharamell21's Avatar
    Posted by kharamell21 Mon Oct 20, 2008 9:34pm PDT

    That addams family, "I'm a homicidal maniac, they look just like everyone else", costume works too.

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  • sbedford87's Avatar
    Posted by sbedford87 Wed Oct 22, 2008 7:51am PDT

    There's a great new Halloween Savings Guide for moms that I found with DIY kids costumes for if you have 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 15, or 30 minutes to make them. And they're mostly from stuff you already own. It's here: http://www.redplum.com/pages/ViewArticle.aspx?articleId=1466

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  • mrscolbert's Avatar
    Posted by mrscolbert Tue Oct 28, 2008 6:09pm PDT

    All my Halloween costumes were homemade. I didn't like the store ones, they were too predictable.

    When I was in first grade, I decided to dress up as a box of French fries. Mom and I had loads of fun making the costume. I wore red pants and a red shirt I think, and we cut a hole in the bottom of a cardboard box and suspended it from my shoulders so the hole was at my waist and the box came up to around my shoulders, with armholes in the box possibly? This was a good long time ago... details are sketchy. Anyway, we spraypainted the box red, but dome shapes in the top so it looked like a frybox, and put the golden arches on it. Then we cut chunks of grayish foam (from what I have no idea) into fry shapes and sprayed them yellow and put them in the box around me. It was a huge hit with the neighbors.

    I wore it for a year, then the next year I handed it down to my little brother and I dressed up as a bottle of ketchup (red outfit, piece of paper on my shirt that said Heinz, and some kind of hat.)

    I was a weird kid. :)

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  • RachelleC's Avatar
    Posted by RachelleC Tue Oct 28, 2008 6:56pm PDT

    DIY- mummy costume for my son- gray sweatpants and shirt, strips of muslin or old sheets, tea/coffee dye all fabric, attatched strips with liquid stitch, on sweats and an old hat, hot glued plastic bugs and spiders all over the finished costume. My son wore this costume with white ( magic stretch ) gloves, then we rubbed dirt on the gloves and his face. Everyone loved it , and a great bonus costs less than $15.00!

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