"And it was always said of him, that he knew how to keep Halloween well, if any man alive possessed the knowledge. May that be truly said of us, and all of us!"
Monday, October 31, 2022
And To All, A Good Halloween Night
Great Balls of Popcorn!
You thought I was done? Not quite yet.
I thought I'd share this traditional Halloween treat with you. Popcorn Balls. I'm old enough to remember when old ladies would hand these out as treats in your Trick or Treat bag.
Deck the Halls with Bowels of Ghoulies
Time for my annual post of my interior decorations. They don't vary much from year to year, but I like to share anyway. Everything (almost) in these shots were garage or estate sale finds.
Haunting Memories
Sunday, October 30, 2022
Old Gold Scarecrow
This ad comes from a lot of 1940's and 50's Saturday Evening Post magazines I bought at an estate sale this weekend. The magazines were $1 each. How could I resist? This particular ad comes from the October 21st, 1953 edition.
Garage Sale Haunts
Saturday, October 29, 2022
Scratch Cat Fever
These die cuts are referred to as "Scratch Cats" due to their extended claws and hackled backs.
This die cut was made by Beistle and dates to the 1960's. It's jointed and can be positioned as desired. I recently found this along with two identical die cuts in a lot at an estate sale. I paid up for the 3 at $15, but each is worth $15, so I didn't do too bad. Aside from the staples in the back of this piece, it and the others are in excellent condition. There are no bends and the joints are tight.
Spirit Ball Memories
I'm not usually into modern Halloween items or props (although granted this is 17 years old), but this piece was pretty cool, the price was right and it reminded me of something from my childhood (more on that later).
Friday, October 28, 2022
Black Cat Face Die Cut
I picked up this cat face diecut in a lot last summer. It was included in the same lot as the Eureka Trick or Treaters and the Eureka Owl. This particular die cut dates to the 1940's and is unmarked.
This is a fairly large die cut measuring 11" x 11". It kind of reminds me of the old Black Cat Fireworks packages.
I Ja, You Ja, We All Ja for Ouija
We had a Ouija board when I was a kid. For some reason it layed on the ground in our furnace room. And it freaked me out. My sister had told stories of how it had predicted who she would marry, providing the initials of the person she did in fact end up marrying. I was pretty afraid of anything potentially ghost related. Yeah, I was a chicken.
I've gotten over that fear and had no problem buying this Ouija board. In fact, I picked up 4 of them this season. There was an odd run where I kept finding Ouija boards.
Even when I was afraid of them, I always loved the art on these. This version dates from the 1960's.
Thursday, October 27, 2022
Hang for Freat
This was actually a thrift store find. I knew it wasn't terribly old, but it's getting harder and harder to come by blow mold pieces these days and its hair plus pink eyes sold it to me.
Kimple Haunted House
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
Schnoz
I believe we're all familiar with the "Groucho Nose" glasses gag. They've been around for years, in fact since the 1940's. But did you know their proper name is "Beaglepuss"? The Topstone company marketed them simply as "Schnoz".
Honeycomb Hitchhiker
Way back in 2014 during my first year in the Countdown to Halloween, I posted about these Honeycomb cereal box cutout records.
This past year, I came across 2 more. One I had before ("Miser's Gold"), but the other was new to me, "The Hitchhiker".
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
Cat Blow Mold
Monday, October 24, 2022
Halloween is Hallowed
Bucketful of Boos
There's been a lot of buzz in the Halloween community for the past few weeks about the re-release of the McDonald's Halloween Boo Buckets, particularly among millelenials who remember these from their childhood.
I previously posted about the earlier 1980's version of these buckets. Since then, I've acquired some of the later series from the late 80's, early 90's and even up to the early 2000's. Again, these don't do much for me as they were past my Halloween prime, but the kids like them. "The Kids" being in their late 30's and early 40's now.
Sunday, October 23, 2022
A Lost Art
Saturday, October 22, 2022
Empire Pails
Friday, October 21, 2022
Radioactive
My house cannot be attributed to any particular design aesthetic unless "Late Garage Sale Era" is a thing.
For a while I focused on Mid-century modern pieces like this lamp, this 1950's Artcraft cabinet and this 1966 RCA Vistat stereo (converted to a media center).
Of course, I had other era pieces as well such as this 1918 Æolian-Vocalion phonograph and this 1941 Trutone radio. And I use appliances that span from the 1910's to the 1970's like these toasters and coffee pots.
Wow, that paragraph was link heavy. But my point is, I'm all over the board when it comes to decorating. The only common theme is I decorate with things I like.
So when I saw this 1920's Art Deco dining room furniture, combined with a price tag that couldn't be beat (it was 50% off day and I got them to come down even more), I caved. Excuse the askew pictures. It was hard to photograph the full piece with the limited angle I had.
Thursday, October 20, 2022
Hanging Skeleton
I found this lone skeleton over the summer. He's marked Hong Kong and looks like something that would have been handed out at carnivals in the '70's.
Wednesday, October 19, 2022
The Tears (and Blood) of a Clown
Tuesday, October 18, 2022
Imagineering Fake Skin
Monday, October 17, 2022
A (Hay) Seed of Truth
Dennison produced this Pa and Ma Pumpkin set of diecuts in 1964. You can tell this is "Pa" by his broken and repaired glasses and by the ubiquitous hay stem clenched in his mouth.
Sunday, October 16, 2022
Saturday, October 15, 2022
Eureka Clown and Ghost Trick or Treaters
This is another Eureka piece I picked up in the past couple months. I bought it at the same sale where I found the owl.
Friday, October 14, 2022
Ceramic Ghost and Jack O' Lantern
Thursday, October 13, 2022
Day 13 of the Countdown, Ah Ha Haaaaaaaa
It must have been Christmas of 1976 when I received 3 Sesame Street puppets as a gift. It was Bert, Ernie and Cookie Monster. I don't recall asking for them, but it's possible. I was 9 years old (just turned), so it sounds a little old for Sesame Street, but I may have just been interested in the idea of puppets. At any rate, I accepted them and played with them on occasion. Cookie Monster was the most fun because his throat actually opened in back and you could force feed him cookies. I recall trying to make this a feature on Ernie as well (using a screwdriver) and just ended up tearing his neck open. If I'd known "Count von Count" was an option, I'm sure I would have asked for him.
Wednesday, October 12, 2022
Chalk One Up for the Owls
I found this chalkware owl at a garage sale over the summer. I was shocked to find it, because it was the only vintage piece among a bunch of newer Halloween decorations.
Tuesday, October 11, 2022
Wanda Witch Flashlight
I found this "Wanda" witch flashlight at a garage sale last October along with quite a few other vintage 1980's Halloween items. The seller assured us she'd be selling vintage Christmas items the following month in another garage sale, but alas, that never happened.
Monday, October 10, 2022
That Voodoo You Do
While this game was incomplete, I decided to buy it for the box art alone. It makes for a good Halloween display piece.
Sunday, October 9, 2022
Dennison Die Cuts
The Dennison Manufacturing Company of Framingham, Massachusetts was established in 1844 as a maker of paper jewelry boxes. When Halloween became popular just after the turn of the 20th century, they began manufacturing party decorations. By the early teens they were publishing party guides known as Bogie Books that told how to throw the perfect Halloween party and just happened to sell the necessary supplies.
These Dennison Die Cuts date from much later. The first two die cuts date from the 1960's and are the large versions measuring 16" tall.
Saturday, October 8, 2022
Get Your Hands on These
Ben Cooper was the "goto" for Halloween costumes from the 1930's through the 1980's. Most people remember them for their cartoon and comic character costumes made of vinyl and sharp plastic masks held to your face with rubber bands so thin they would snap if you merely flexed your cheeks (and not necessarily the ones on your face).
Ben Cooper also marketed latex and rubber masks that could be found hung on racks or piled unceremoniously in cardboard bins at stores such as Woolworth's and Ben Franklin's. It was at my local Ben Franklin's around Halloween every year that would find me digging through the masks, trying each one on, the smell of latex filling my nose, and dreaming of buying one so I could REALLY scare some people while Trick or Treating that year. And if the masks weren't enough, you could buy matching rubber gloves to complete your look. Oh, who could possibly afford such luxuries? Not me. So back in the bins they went.
I found these Ben Cooper rubber gloves this past year. They date from the late 1970's to early 1980's.
Friday, October 7, 2022
I Come to Praise Cesar
Thursday, October 6, 2022
Wednesday, October 5, 2022
The Ghost Book
There's a long tradition of posting complete strangers' childhood drawings on this blog. And it seems like they are almost always Halloween themed. I think it's because Halloween seems to bring out the most imaginative images, those of ghosts, ghouls and goblins.
Back in 2014, I shared this "Brew Print"
In 2019, I shared this picture and my own childhood story.
Today, I bring you an entire book of drawings. Okay, it's only 4 pages long. But in the words of Count Floyd, oooooohhhh, it's SCARY! From approximately 1980, I give you "The Ghost Book".
Tuesday, October 4, 2022
Click Click
I recognized the graphics on this small tin metal basket when I came across it in the basement of an estate sale this summer. I already had the matching can where I keep my smaller Halloween cake decorations.
Monday, October 3, 2022
Sunday, October 2, 2022
Bowled Over
I've found you can't let the feel of a sale throw you off and lower your guard. I was in a newer home a couple months ago and wasn't finding anything vintage. I'd already swept through the basement and was getting ready to head up when I went looking for my wife to let her know I was leaving. She was bent over a box filled with newer party supplies which I'd seen but not thought much of. She pulled out a stack of 6 vintage Halloween scalloped plastic treat bowls. They were in mint condition.
Saturday, October 1, 2022
Halloween 2022 - It's My Bag, Baby, But I'm Running Out of Them
Yes, it's Halloween season once again and that means it's time for those things I've found in the past year that lean toward Halloween or the weird; it's time for "Garage Sale Finds" to transform into "Stranger Finds".
As always, I'll begin this year's offerings with a Trick-or-Treat bag. Let me tell you, I'm running out of ones I haven't already posted. I've had this one for a while, but I've yet to post it.
This bag dates from 1988 (which is 34 years ago, people!) and was given out at Michael's (which I didn't even know what a thing in 1988, but apparently has been around since 1973). It features a scraggly, if not "scratch", cat astride a hollowed-out pumpkin. Frankly, he looks a little strung out.