Grimquiet's Vintage Trick Or Treater Figures


Okay, one more post before the big party because this is just too good not to share! As I look at my watch, it's currently 3:00 pm EST and there are just 2 short hours before these absolutely incredible figures go live.

Eric has REALLY done an exceptional job on these handmade vintage trick or treater figures. He perfectly nails the disfigured creepiness of each sculpt, and then completes each with a drab, tattered costume and twisted pumpkin pail. So much unsettling folk art moodiness and simplicity in each piece...

The Witch


The Ghost


The Skeleton


The Clown

These pieces go on sale at 5:00 pm EST TODAY over at the Grimquiet Bigcartel page. Get there quick, because these WILL sell out!

Good luck (but please save a Skeleton figure for me)!

  

One More Week...


Photo courtesy of Everything's Halloween.

Just one more week until the start of October and the beginning of another creepy Countdown To Halloween Cemetery celebration! I'm all ready to go with a ton of posts for the entire month, so check back daily for the black-and-orange blog blowout. The party starts here promptly on October 1st. Don't be late...

Only 36 more days until Halloween. Are you ready?

  

Nekropolis - "Krypta"


Here is another absolute gem from the dawn of the dark ambient genre. German electronic composer Peter Frohmader's incredible Nekropolis project from 1981 featuring this hauntingly dark, discordant composition.

From Wikipedia:
Some of his music was performed on industrial and domestic tools, as well as on self-made instruments and electronic media. His influence was noted by bands such as The Sisters of Mercy, Throbbing Gristle, and Deine Lakaien, and he became better known in Japan, the U.S. and Britain than in Germany. His music was "characterized by a fondness for the nightmarish and the fantastic."

The original 1981 LP release on which this track is featured, Musik Aus Dem Schattenreich, has gone straight into the Cemetery wantlist and will be on constant rotation throughout the spooky season.

Enjoy!



Haunted House Season Starts Tomorrow!


Tomorrow is Friday the 13th, a day to celebrate everyone's favorite hockey-masked serial slasher. But for Halloween fans, it means something more... the official start of the 2024 haunted house season! Many haunts will capitalize on the special date and open their doors to start the season a bit early.

And living in Ohio, haunted house season is a HUGE celebration. Incredible haunted houses everywhere you look across the state are a huge part of why Halloween is such a big deal here. And keeping it all straight is no easy task.

Luckily for us, Maximus Christian Bryant over at the Ohio Haunters Association has done the legwork of taking ALL of the haunted attractions across Ohio (113 in total!) and breaking them into regional lists including location, dates and days of operation, AND ticket price. Literally everything you need in one convenient location. So many haunted houses, so little time.

If you're in Ohio, get out and support your local haunted houses. And if you're not from Ohio, October is a pretty good time to come visit! See you in the queue line!!




  

Home Depot Grim Reaper Statue Prop Upgrade





The first prop of the 2024 season is now complete! This year, my schedule is going to be very full (a kid in club travel baseball, anyone?), and I have resigned myself to the fact that I just won't have the time for any major projects.

Luckily the big box stores have really upped their game this year, offering props that I would actually include in my display (snobbish, maybe, but I have always been of the thought that buying a bunch of store-bought props and throwing them in the yard is a disservice to the creativity and dedication to the home haunter culture. But that is a discussion for another time...).

Last week, I decided to peruse the Halloween section at my local Home Depot, and discovered this super cool 42 in. Grim Reaper Statue. A really great piece right from the start, but I felt I could add just a bit of detail to really make it pop. So I grabbed one, brought it home, and immediately went to work.

The original prop, from Home Depot.


The finished prop, from Highbury Cemetery.

I started with a wash of dark purple/black paint in the recessed areas of the statue. I really wanted to add depth and contrast that I felt was missing from the original. I then went in with a dry brushed white paint and touched up the raised areas, furthering the contrast.

I also wanted to make this piece look like it had been sitting in an old cemetery for a long time, so I then went in with a green "moss" paint wash in the recessed areas of the bottom of the statue and around the skeleton's face. I had originally planned on using an old Spore Kit from Brutal Rust to give an added flocked moss texture to the piece, but decided against it after seeing the great results of just the green paint.

Finally, I went in with a watered down black wash and added "streaks" around the eyes, nose and mouth of the skeleton. I wanted to keep the most detail in the focal point of the piece.

And after all of the various paints and washes were complete (and I was quite happy with the results), I wanted to add one final accent to really push it over the top. I had an old Webcaster Glue Gun sitting in my basement, so I decided to fire it up and create a veil of cobwebs to give it one last element of creepiness. I had never actually used a Webcaster Gun before, but I gave it a try. I'm sure with practice the webs will look much better, but I'm still happy with the way they turned out here and they photograph REALLY well!

This thing is going to look great in the Cemetery display this year, and it didn't take much time to give it that "little something extra."

After everything was done, the only thing left to do was take the statue to the local cemetery and get some photos!


  

Metgumbnerbone - "Death"


I have long been a fan of dark ambient, the music genre that I still feel perfectly embodies the creepiness of the Halloween season (and makes a perfect soundtrack for any yard haunt!). And as I continue to seek out more and different releases, I find myself discovering rarer sub-genres and releases to fill my growing library.

Case in point is this incredible track dating all the way back to 1985. I don't yet know much about Metgumbnerbone, outside of the fact that they are an obscure industrial/ritual ambient act from Newcastle, England, founded in 1983 and still recording today. But upon hearing this track, I'm definitely seeking out more of their work, because this one is really dark and haunting!

"Death" is on constant repeat as I'm working on props in the garage all weekend. Enjoy!